Intel recruits members of its community for mass testing of its Arc A7 lineup with free, indefinitely loaned, GPUs
As hardware reviewers, we are intimately familiar with ILAs; basically any hardware unit you receive which is yours to keep for future testing comes under an indefinite loan agreement. The item stays “loaned” forever and you can essentially completely destroy it (as long as its in the name of science) but it will stay the property of the manufacturer for legal purposes. Intel started its Arc marketing in the early days under the Odyssey campaign and people who physically attended select Odyssey events were given a special card (whose purpose was supposed to remain a mystery). Now it seems, the mystery is solved. Select Odyssey card holders (presumably the earliest ones) have received offers to receive an Intel Arc A7 GPU completely free of cost (Intel will even bear all duties and taxes) under an ILA - in return for just using it as a daily driver and helping them out with reporting bugs. When we learned that Odyssey card holders were being contacted, we reached out to Intel and they made the following comments. Unfortunately, they refrained from confirming (or denying) whether this constituted a revival (or continuation or climax) of the Odyssey campaign: As you may remember, Intel also started a new community program during the scavenger hunt, called ‘Intel Insiders’ and based on our conversations with people who received these cards, the vast majority are actually part of the Intel Insiders community (which is hosted primarily on Discord). Based on our admittedly limited sample, the vast majority of people who received these cards got them through the Intel Insiders program - and not from being an Odyssey card holder.
— Albert Thomas aka Bizude (@ultrawide219) October 12, 2022 Intel’s Intel Insider’s page lists the program benefits as such: A thriving and loyal community is the key to the growth of any PC IHV. AMD is the best example of the fruits of such labor and the Intel Insider Discord already has tens of thousands of members that are participating in the various feedback channels. Combined with iterative improvements to the driver stack coming from Intel and features like DXVK that can provide overnight performance improvements to the graphics cards, Intel seems to be pulling no punches when it comes to finding - and removing - bugs in its first ever attempt at building a mainstream graphics card lineup.