You misunderstand, we check the whitelisted subset of functionality we rely on, of course we can check it works as we expect?
This is a nice soundbite that I guess could sound good to someone who doesn't understand hardware at all but doesn't address anything I said.
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Then help me understand, I test 10 Transmeta chips, and find all of them start miscalculating branches when some unit is heated with some odd instruction sequence. Should I add Transmeta to the whitelist? I would say no, but it sounds like you're saying, that means nothing.
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How many times did you test a set of chips from a vendor and see that outcome? I'm guessing zero? The broader point is that testing with no model of the underlying process is going to lead to testing things that aren't informative at all.
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