Simple: extremely poor business practices and management. Success of most products has little to do with their technical merit. You can have the best widget in the world, but if you run your business as poorly as nVidia did, well, you see what happened.
Buyers need to trust the source; nVidia just blew it through exceptionally poor decisions on cost cutting moves and other totally business related choices.
Just like you can increase sales of shoddy products via effective marketing, you can kill sales of good products via management stupidity and incompetence.
An apology from Jen 'I'm so proud of my humility' Hsun? You're kidding right?
Seems that saying sorry and doing a media 'mea culpa' might be the solution?
Simple: extremely poor business practices and management. Success of most products has little to do with their technical merit. You can have the best widget in the world, but if you run your business as poorly as nVidia did, well, you see what happened.
Buyers need to trust the source; nVidia just blew it through exceptionally poor decisions on cost cutting moves and other totally business related choices.
Just like you can increase sales of shoddy products via effective marketing, you can kill sales of good products via management stupidity and incompetence.
What I don't understand is, given the huge success of nForce 2 in the last century, why can't nVidia boards compete in the modern world?