So you don't remember that MAI denied the first bug too? Only after a long period of time they said that they can reproduce it and also only because Mr Carda was in Fremont, CA for two weeks...
I don't recall any denial. I do recall Mr Carda going out there and installing MOS on a Teron so that everyone could find out where the problem was. (That was what gave rise to "MOS runs on A1" from certain quarters afterwards, neatly sidestepping the different-firmware issues, BTW).
For the remaining "bugs" the response has been "We've tried this, but we can't reproduce the alleged bug".
The Pegasos is
not a Teron board, it is quite possible that problems might arise that in fact have little or nothing to do with the Articia itself, just as it's possible that problems might exist on the Teron board that wouldn't on the Pegasos. No matter how good the engineers, perfection is well-nigh unattainable. However, when a company - in whose interest it is to have as good a product as possible - spends time looking for supposed bugs, cannot reproduce them (I gather this time Mr Carda didn't bother flying out ?), many people will reasonably wonder if the problem is in fact with the mobo or firmware, rather than inherent in the chip itself.
However, all that aside, I find it frankly hilarious that Genesi are continuing to purchase Articia chips that still contain the old bugs - found back in Nov 2002 - rather than the new, bug-free chips that are currently going out on the new A1 boards.
As for the "real speed" of a G4 CPU, let's see some laboratory-condition benchmarks instead of blithe assertions.