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Intel Explicite Why It Faked a DX11 Graphics demonstrate on Ivy Bridge
In few ways the Internet is similar to the digital equivalent of truth serum. It forces individual to fess up and spill the beans on their shenanigans, because in few matters, their methods are grabbed on video and uploaded to the Web for entire the world to see. This occured to Intel at CES when Mooly Eden, general manager of Intel's Computer client group, was caught faking a DirectX 11 graphics demonstrate on an Ivy Bridge Ultrabook.
The "live demo" was guessed to show off Ivy Bridge's DX11 capabilities through assuming a lap in the game F1 2011. Eden caught the wheel of the controller, but as the demonstrate began, a complete glimps of VLC media player controls looked on the bottom of the display, a clear indication it was a pre-recorded demonstrate.
It was an awkward time, created still more so as Eden let go of the wheel and told he did not require to utilize his hands "because they are driving it from backstage." Clearly Eden familiar he had been grabbed no-handed, and in a flustered
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time was put on the spot to come up with an excuse, one that did not create sense. You can catch a video of the incident over at IT World.
If the DX11 capabilities on Ivy Bridge are so nice, then why fake the demonstrate? It is a question that hastened by the blogosphere, with few wondering now how long Intel went in pulling the wool over the audience's eyes. Did Intel record the demonstrate utilizing a discrete graphics processing unit and test to pass it off as Ivy Bridge? The fact is actually long less sinister.
As it was explicated to Anandtech, the demonstrate was a former addition to Intel's introduction and the Santa Clara chip maker simply did not have time to fix it up live. Nevertheless, Intel stood firm in telling that it functions only as everybody saw in the video, and to show it, the company invited Anandtech to assure out a live demonstrate -- an actual one -- on an Ivy Bridge notebook. It was not the similar one Eden was utilizing, but it was rocking Intel's Ivy Bridge platform with Intel HD Graphics 4000. You can see how it departed here.