yes but its not 256bit over the 4gb is it? that is the issue... on the box it says 256bit .... it isnt.
Im not trying to be annoying but this is the crux of the matter at hand. Anyway i guess we wait and see what nvidia have to say
As for the dropped call... i phoned at about 10ish and spoke to someone who put me throught to returns... the phone beeped i heard some background noise and the call dropped. So with hindsight i will say its more likely a dropped call rather than someone putting it down on me, for which i aplogise for my earlier statement.
The Box on my Infinity says the same thing. Now that is open to interpretation and would make interesting arguments if people wanted to take matters further.
Companies (which include the Manufacture and Retailer) need to advertise products with Descriptions that truly\accurately reflect the product at the time of Sale. They, also, need to be easy enough to understand for the laymen (in this case none Technical bods). We should not need to know the logical design of nVidia's GM204 Processor implemented in the GTX970 to fully understand what the 256 bit bus is or how it is split.
Currently, all advertising for the GTX970 says it has a 256 bit bus across the whole 4G of RAM - which is how the layman would read it. This where they and their Agents (retailers who sold them) may become unstuck.
Current advertising does not say this:
224 bit across 3.5G and then 32 bit on the remaining 512mb for a total of 256 bit bus memory subsystem. Which is now the actual Specs of the Card as publicly announce as an correction a couple of days ago.
Now, the problem for nVidia is that they did not state (not that I can find anyway) that the 'total' bus width is 256 bit split into two subsections. And from looking at the spec of the Card from the nVidia Web Site they still state a full 256 bit wide bus on 4G of VRAM - no mention of the split brain.
GTX 970 Memory Specs:
7.0 GbpsMemory Clock
4 GBStandard Memory Config
GDDR5Memory Interface
256-bitMemory Interface Width
Source :
http://www.geforce.co.uk/hardware/desktop-gpus/geforce-gtx-970/specifications
As I said above, this is open to the way you read the Specs but as nVidia have now correctly informed the buying Public of the true design (which could be seen a admittance of misleading information to some degree) and misleading being the key word.
Now we are into a interesting situation. One that I'm sure has kept Legal Teams from nVidia and Retailers, alike, busy for the last couple of Days and probably accounts for the delay on any further 'official' response. I'm sure that nVidia and Retailers will try to say that even after the miss-information, the Card still functions very well and there is no real negative effect on performance in light of the omission.
The next update will need to be worded externally carefully to try a mitigate any risk.