NVIDIA Geforce Drivers 196.75 WHQL Revoked by NVidia


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One of the discussions that arise anytime we bring up a new graphics card from ATI or NVIDIA is about which company has the better drivers. Well, this should help sway the argument a little bit. It would seem StarCraft II Beta players were among the first to notice low frame rates while using the latest drivers from NVIDIA, and further digging has uncovered that the automated fan-controlling part of said firmware was failing to act as intended. The result? Overheated chips, diminished performance, and in some extreme cases, death (of the GPU, we think the users will be okay). The totality of it is that you should avoid the 196.75 iteration like the plague, and NVIDIA has temporarily yanked the update while investigating the reported issues. Shame that the company hasn't got any warnings up on its site to tell those who've installed the update but haven't yet nuked their graphics card to roll back their drivers, but that's what you've got us for, right?

Source: Engadget

Oops.; seems more stable for me, but uninstalling it to be on the safe side.

  • Like 1

Yeah, I was affected by this. Usually my graphics card idles at 37c - 39c idle. When I resumed from standby, the temps were like 50c+, which is insane for idle. I've been temporarily shutting my computer down to prevent any sort of temperature damage.

I agree, this is really bad - Glad I'm running ATi these days.

Thank you, ATI Companion! Apparently ATI doesn't make mistakes like the rest of us so we should all ditch our NVIDIA cards.

In other news, I'm having no issues at all except GPU Observer telling me that my VRAM is at 100% after playing Divinity II: Ego Draconis. Though I suspect it's not reporting correctly and if I reboot it will be back to normal. By the way, it's not a bad game, it just takes awhile to decide it's worth playing.

Thank you, ATI Companion! Apparently ATI doesn't make mistakes like the rest of us so we should all ditch our NVIDIA cards.

Who said that? Oh, you're just butthurt :happy:

:rolleyes:

Like ATI has NEVER released a bad set of drivers.

Again, I never claimed that, did I :rolleyes: People are so on edge around here - I am no hardware fanboy, I purchase whatever I can afford and offers me the best performance in

games I play. So the last time I decided to go with an ATi card, unlike my previous 3 cards which were from nVidia. And had I picked an nVidia could it would have been a GX2 / SLi

combination and that would have hit me hard with poor performance in BC2 and headaches about bad drivers.

So yes, how dare I be happy at this moment that i chose to go with ATi so I didn't have to suffer with these problems :rolleyes:

well its not just nvidia's driver that's getting a bad rep from this, the WHQL certificate is suddenly abit suspect now...?

There's been enough buggy drivers from big-name vendors over the years to show that WHQL is a joke. But destroying cards takes it to another level. I'm always wary about updating nvidia drivers so I dodged this bullet. Gonna sit tight when the next ones come out and see if they're ok. Apparently they did bring noticable speed gains over the earlier 19x drivers.

well its not just nvidia's driver that's getting a bad rep from this, the WHQL certificate is suddenly abit suspect now...?

You raise a good point there... How could a such a major fault pass WHQL certification as well as Nvidia's internal beta testing process?

Either the testing and certification folks aren't doing their jobs OR something else is causing the fan problem...

Figures :p I haven't upgraded my drivers in months since most everything was working fine...but had some odd graphics glitches a few days back, figured might as well update, so I updated on the 3rd with these >.< So far haven't noticed issues like mentioned...but I suppose it's a good time to change to a different version...just in case

I have a dead XFX 9800GT after installing these drivers, it fried (bad smell + loud crack). Evidently I experienced the fan control bug!

I'm really hoping we see some program of replacement or compensation. I don't overclock or mess with anything related to my hardware or its drivers. You couldn't get a more out-of-the-box setup. Card in slot, install drivers, job done. Yet still it fails. Many people on the Nvidia forums are trying to blame us, the users. Very frustrating.

Please put this on the front page - we need some publicity to help ensure we are suitably compensated.

I have a dead XFX 9800GT after installing these drivers, it fried (bad smell + loud crack). Evidently I experienced the fan control bug!

I'm really hoping we see some program of replacement or compensation. I don't overclock or mess with anything related to my hardware or its drivers. You couldn't get a more out-of-the-box setup. Card in slot, install drivers, job done. Yet still it fails. Many people on the Nvidia forums are trying to blame us, the users. Very frustrating.

Please put this on the front page - we need some publicity to help ensure we are suitably compensated.

well if you registered your product with XFX. i think your card is under lifetime warranty with them. send it back to them

Yeah the card is registered and the support ticket is awaiting technician response. I couldn't find any info about the length of the warranty, so I really hope you are right! :)

Edit: actually XFX have responded, and said I just need to take it back to the reseller. Which is a real pain, given it's 14months old and I'm not sure I have the receipt... also what are the chances of the person in the shop actually believing this issue (unless they happen to be on the ball). Not impressed!

http://www.xfxforce.com/en-us/Features/DoubleLifetimeWarranty.aspx

Double Lifetime Protection*

Nothing tops our warranty. It?s not just a limited lifetime warranty, it?s a transferable lifetime warranty. So, should you sell your XFX 6-, 7-, 8-, 9-, GTX-, GTS-, GT-, and GeForce Series or any XFX Radeon HD Series cards, whomever you give it to or sell it to is protected, as well. Better still, it?s the best card on the planet for gamers who push our cards to the limit.

What Do I Get?

It?s this simple: We will service and repair any XFX 6-, 7-, 8-, 9-, GTX-, GTS-, GT-, and GeForce Series or any XFX Radeon HD Series Graphics Card for the lifetime of that card. All you have to do is register your card with us online within 30 days of purchase. And, if you sell or give the card to someone else, we?ll honor the warranty for the second owner, as long as he/she registers the card with us.

What?s Covered?

All XFX 6-, 7-, 8-, 9-, GTX, GT and GeForce Series and XFX Radeon HD Series registered Graphics Cards. The limited hardware warranty lasts for a period of one year. However, to be covered by the XFX Double Lifetime Limited Warranty, you must register your card within 30 days of purchase.

How Do I Get It?

Simply purchase an applicable XFX Graphics Card and register it within 30 days of purchase. That is all it takes.

*Double Lifetime Protection only available in North America (United States and Canada). Applies to select graphics cards products only. Restrictions and qualifications may vary based on state or region. See XFX Support section for more details on the Limited Warranty for XFX-branded products in North America. Warranty terms for other regions vary.

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