Soldato
You've failed to address any of the things you made up, the bold claims you've made that are incorrect or really anything else.
a very quick recap
1/ you claim it's toshiba technology, not amd's
2/ I call BS
3/you say I'm twisting things
4/ you imply I was saying it was an AMD panel but it's a toshiba panel
5/ i point out I never claimed it was AMD tech, nor an AMD panel but it's rather ridiculous to claim it's toshiba tech when you don't know if it's a toshiba screen.
I'm not clutching at straws, it was pointing out the weakness of YOUR argument. Your counter, as is usual for someone who has nothing to stand on, was to imply this was the basis of my argument... even though you are the one clutching to the idea it's Toshiba tech, not me.
Why would Nvidia patent a Vesa standard, beyond the impossibility of it there is no implication of this, nor accusation from anyone besides, by your own words, you twisting what I've said to imply this.
Nvidia has 3dvision.... nothing in 3dvision isn't an industry standard. A 3dvision screen updates the screen 120 times a second. It's a 120hz screen, nothing more or less. 3dvision is a brand name. You can trademark brand names for pretty much any technology you want.
The same way almost every tv manufacturer has a different name for their 100/200hz implementations. Sony call it truevision, Panasonic call it "football that is less sucky to watch". Trademarks for almost identical technology from multiple companies is incredibly common, in fact pretty much industry standard. I have consistently said that this is what I believe g-sync will eventually end up has, identical hardware 6 months from now, Nvidia call it one name on their feature list, AMD call it something else, Intel call it something else.
Once again, I haven't claimed that g-sync works identically to freesync, I said it gives the same effect, which is all the end user remotely cares about.
Again, I ended it with 'LOL'. Although AMD are still making use of the standard freely so it's still true to a degree. You're getting hung up on that one particular thing and stalling.
If it's not a possibility that they're using VESA standards, then it is IMPLIED that they are using it by yourself as you're comparing it directly to Freesync saying I told you so.
I'm not interested in what other patents you know about lol. Infuriating. I'm out. At Face value if Nvidia are not using an industry standard technology within their G-Sync scalers then I can't see how it is the same as V-Sync as you clearly implied in your original post.
Please don't mention Toshiba again
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