are you serious? I test a simple printer driver update for weeks on the focus machines before I forward it to the rest of users, let alone how long I test a new video driver. Installing 0 day drivers are for enthusiast and gamers, you don't do such thing when you mean business.
I tend to agree. Drivers, of all kinds, should be left to the user to decide. If a professional (not a domain controlled environment, mind you) wants to update to the latest drivers then he/she should be able to. If he/she does not, then he/she ought to be able to opt out.
In my opinion, we should be talking about fourseparate things:
1) the graphics driver (inf, sys, etc.)
2) an automatic driver updater (could be a light weight application that delays start to check for new updates)
3) AMD CCC & NVIDIA Control Panel
4) AMD Gaming Evolved & NVIDIA GeForce Experience.
The first is required and is reasonable for Windows Update to fetch this when it using Microsoft's standard VGA driver, the second should be opt-out because most people will want to keep drivers current, the third should be opt-in because most of the important features can be handled by the operating system itself (e.g. multi-monitor support), and the fourth should be a complete separate installer (not unlike PhysX) so only people that want it will get it.
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My Radeon use lately has been intermittent at best lately, but I distinctly remember having a number of frustrating issues ranging from the PowerPlay voltage (BIOS) issue ( I've owned five HD 5850's - not including 3 RMA's, plus HD 5770's, and a HD 5970 from the Evergreen series), laptop Enduro/hybrid crossfire, the on-again, off-again giant mouse cursor, memory leaks, TDR's, general Crossfire issues including clocks locking up/down, intermittent USB and sound over HDMI conflicts and the like. I've had (or had to deal with) many driver issues from both Nvidia and AMD - not to mention a host of sound card vendors, so I'd never say any are above reproach
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You must be one unlucky bastard.