The exact same FPGA cards are available in AWS, so it would be trivial to verify it all for one's self, but the end-to-end software stack to do so has not yet been made available.
And expecting people to buy rather expensive hardware without making available the software stack required for public peer review is... bold.
This is what i meant, the hardware is there and capable but at what numbers/hashrates, for that we need the software, hopefully it will soon be out for everyone to see cause as it stands, without the software to mine, these will just be expensive paperweights until the software is released, i do know there's other uses for the specific fpga in this thread but the paperweight comment is for this specific use, as in mining.
Okay. So remain skeptical and wait for everyone to report back. Is that so hard to do?
It is worth pointing out that many of us developing this mining software/bitstreams do not even have VCU1525 cards in our possession yet. That means our numbers are based on the same/nearly same chip on VCU118 dev boards. I'm sure many will be happy to provide more details as they get their development VCU1525s to test with.