Eck
YaBB Newbies
Offline

I love YaBB 1G - SP1!
Posts: 7
Gender:
|
Whew! Thanks. Finally an informed explanation. I can breath easier now.
This board has a sticker on the bios chip that looks like it shipped with bios 1013. Since I don't know what someone might have done with the board, I'm gonna start out with everything set manually with the dip's. I bought a brand new retail box'd Athlon 3000+ 333fsb and a Crucial 512mb 2700DDR stick. I don't want to burn them on the first boot with the older bios that doesn't read this processor. I'll go back to jumper free after flashing to 1017.
I've spent the last few days reading everything pertaining to this board on the pcper website. I've got the i/o bracket, the mb cd, and the gameport/USB2.0 module for it. I downloaded the latest Via 4-in1's and Via USB 2.0 driver from Viaarena, as well as all the updates from Asus.
I'm waiting for the Thermaltake 480 watt power supply and the D-link DGE530T ethernet card and I'll be all set. I'm going to use an Sblive 5.1 instead of the C-media onboard audio.
The one thing I'm uncertain of is the Promise Raid stuff. I made the floppy for possible future XP installs, but I'll be using 98SE with all the service pack 2.0 and 98SE2ME updates for it at this point.
I've never used Raid and don't really want those Promise Controllers active. I'll just be using one Maxtor 120GB HD and a Lite-on CD-RW/DVD-ROM combo drive. Now, I've set the dip for the Promise to off. I'm hoping that this will just completely deactivate the Promise IDE slots, but will not affect the normal Via IDE slots. Am I right about this? It seems a waste of boot time and resources, especially since the Promise Controller shares its IRQ with the USB 2.0! I'd rather have a good, working USB 2.0 than active, empty Promise IDE slots.
You see my current computers in my signature. My plan is to have a system with modern oomph to run my video encoding fast, but that still will let me use 98SE and its Dos features. I was dissapointed in the A7V880, as 98's dos is nearly unusable with the motherboard claiming dos memory for its own resources. The A7V333 allows reserving an ISA IRQ for the non-maskable interrupt use of the SBLive dos driver. It looks as though this is my dream board, as I can use my older toys and still get my encoding done in a couple of hours instead of half a day (like on my KT7A).
Now, if the last user of this board didn't somehow destroy something on it I'll be pleased. I don't even know if he or she used the board at all! The Asus IDE cables and brackets all are in the sealed plastic bags, and the board came in the retail box with all the manuals, Asus sticker, QuickStart guide, the sticker with the board's diagram, etc. All for $27.00!
I'll have a 120mm fan blowing in at the front and a 60mm fan blowing out the back, along with the power supply's 2 fans and the stock AMD heatsink. It looks like I'm all set!
Now, if you could get me staightend out on turning this unwanted Promise controller off I'd be even more confident. The Asus FAQ just says to leave the dip switch on and don't enter the Promise bios, install the OS normally, then install the Promise driver. But that is not ideal for me, as an unneeded device will be loading and usurping resources from my USB that way.
And, Obi-Wan, I'm looking forward to you're kicking Anakin's butt on May 19th!
|