Well he did the mistake on a SSD test system. If hes doing that on a test systems i.e. not cleaning it while switching hardware and drivers. Its not far fetched what else has happened we havent had a PSA for.
Of course I didn't test (benchmark) anything like that, you think I don't know? I tested a new build of GPU-Z using Remote Debugger, on NVIDIA, to check some code changes. Benchmark performance is irrelevant in this case
He run the game's benchmark. Ultra settings in game, stock settings for the card and Ryzen, 50 fps at 1440p. Your testing reported 39.6 fps.
The benchmark is useless, it does not represent actual gaming performance. Play the game, stand in Athens, what's the FPS? Turn around, what's the FPS now?
An application that goes with hardware you've uninstalled wasn't removed, and doesn't know the hardware was removed
Of course it can know that the hardware isn't present anymore. Otherwise we wouldn't be seeing this problem at all. The DVR software does check for AMD hardware and doesn't start, the Settings software does not, and waits forever for the DVR software to start.
multi-GPU bugs are left in GPU-Z
More details please, ideally in the GPU-Z bug report forum.
Be careful when doing performance evaluations because such issues could skew results
They definitely will, which is why I mentioned the 0.5% FPS difference even on a 8c/16t system. I wouldn't be surprised if this affected some less experienced reviewers. As mentioned above I did not benchmark anything on this dual-core machine.
You better explain yourself what you doing with dual core!
See beginning of this post. It's an old system that's useful to have around, and it works surprisingly well for these tasks.
It doesn't care about the why. Its software. You can explain why you tried using an unsupported graphics card all day but it doesnt change anything. AMD might need to patent some sort of mechanism that comes out of the PC and slaps the GPU out of your hand. Until that time comes software can only stop you from installing when you have an incompatible GPU in.
This is not how it works. Windows enumerates all hardware on bootup and does not load drivers for devices that are not present. Go to Device Manager and check "Show Hidden Devices". All these devices are "installed" in your system, and have the driver ready to go.
It's a bug not a conspiracy
I really don't think AMD did this deliberately. It's got to be an unintentional problem...
Of course not, this is just a mistake
I guess next to test is nVidia driver on a system whit Intel CPU and AMD gpu?
That's a great idea. If I find something, do you want me to post an article?