Intel's proposed fixes have not been well-received by everyone, lol.
https://www.theverge.com/2018/1/23/16922530/linus-torvalds-intel-spectre-cpu-fixes-commentI'm forced to find myself agreeing with Linus (Torvalds, not Sebastian) on this one. There's no conspiracy theory, Intel didn't deliberately create these "backdoor" flaws/vulnerabilities in their architecture. But, that being said, they're quite happy to opportunistically exploit it with half-assed solutions on their existing tech and a solid security-conscious reason to upgrade to their new tech. They don't make money supporting and servicing (and replacing) old products, they make money selling new products.
Personally, I think this is a prime example of exactly what happens when products are rushed. Skylake, Z100, Kabylake, Z200, Coffeelake, Z300, all fired onto the market in rapid succession without any real effort dedicated to resolving a growing pile of serious errata, just keep moving forward and sell those CPUs to as many people as possible.
And logically, if rushed products create problems then rushed fixes will create more problems. It takes time to do things right. And it's already been proven that software dev doesn't work on mythical man-hours, you can't solve every kind of software problem (or even speed up the solution) by just throwing more men and machines and money at it. If it takes a week or a month then so be it, wait for the solution to arrive or use alternative technologies or mitigate the severity of living with the problem.
So I blame Intel, not ASUS. Don't get me wrong, ASUS is far from perfect, lol ... but in this instance any anger and demands directed at them is misplaced.
Intel sucks again, another point for Team Red.
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