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Nvidia won, we all lost

(blog.sebin-nyshkim.net)
977 points todsacerdoti | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.47s | source
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rkagerer ◴[] No.44469388[source]
I am a volunteer firefighter and hold a degree in electrical engineering. The shenanigans with their shunt resistors, and ensuing melting cables, is in my view criminal. Any engineer worth their salt would recognize pushing 600W through a bunch of small cables with no contingency if some of them have failed is just asking for trouble. These assholes are going to set someone's house on fire.

I hope they get hit with a class action lawsuit and are forced to recall and properly fix these products before anyone dies as a result of their shoddy engineering.

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rkagerer ◴[] No.44469514[source]
Apparently somebody did sue a couple years back. Anyone know what happened with the Lucas Genova vs. nVidia lawsuit?

EDIT: Plantiff dismissed it. Guessing they settled. Here are the court documents (alternately, shakna's links below include unredacted copies):

https://www.classaction.org/media/plaintiff-v-nvidia-corpora...

https://www.classaction.org/media/plaintiff-v-nvidia-corpora...

A GamersNexus article investigating the matter: https://gamersnexus.net/gpus/12vhpwr-dumpster-fire-investiga...

And a video referenced in the original post, describing how the design changed from one that proactively managed current balancing, to simply bundling all the connections together and hoping for the best: https://youtu.be/kb5YzMoVQyw

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1. middle-aged-man ◴[] No.44469721[source]
Do those mention failing to follow Underwriters Laboratory requirements?

I’m curious whether the 5090 package was not following UL requirements.

Would that make them even more liable?

Part of me believes that the blame here is probably on the manufacturers and that this isn’t a problem with Nvidia corporate.

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2. ◴[] No.44469882[source]