Catbat, since you have a Dell I would follow this up with them. They've already disclosed that several of their computers are affected by the nVidia issue and whether yours is included or not, I'd complain now rather than waiting for an outright failure of the graphics card. Document the graphics corruption as best you can, and read up a little on the issue. I think this
account is reasonably fair, but google for yourself to see the range of opinion.
Although everyone who has an nVidia card manufactured within the last 2 years should be concerned, I would not go so far as to say that they are all destined to fail. NVidia made an SEC filing 2 mos. ago to set aside $200 million for defective chips, and that is far too little to cover all chips produced in 8300 - 8700 range. Of course they might have lied, but the financial and legal penalty for making a false claim to the SEC is much more serious than the cost of replacing the affected chips. Since then they've been publicly pressured about the issue and repeatedly declared that the number of affected chips is small, which would expose them to shareholder lawsuits if they are lying.
There is already a
class-action lawsuit against nVidia on behalf of its shareholders, which you should watch if you have an nVidia card. The outcome of that will point the way to whether a lawsuit for consumers would be viable.