Buying New Comp Parts...
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Unless you are using a SSD, then you won't notice it. If you are using an SSD, then NCQ is moot anyways.
I think most of the AHCI drivers where started after XP support ended - hence the reason for the inconsistent support for it.
As for hotplgu - my sata drives are hot pluggable on my nf4 board, under XP, but not my newer AMD board.
I think most of the AHCI drivers where started after XP support ended - hence the reason for the inconsistent support for it.
As for hotplgu - my sata drives are hot pluggable on my nf4 board, under XP, but not my newer AMD board.
Last edited by funkyass on Tue Dec 22, 2009 11:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Does [Kevin] Smith masturbate with steel wool too?
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Yeah. There's nothing that prevents you from having more than two IDE channels. It's just that four devices is all most consumers need, so only two channels are built into most motherboard chipsets.
KHDownloadsSquall_Leonhart wrote:DirectInput represents all bits, not just powers of 2 in an axis.You have your 2s, 4s, 8s, 16s, 32s, 64s, and 128s(crash course in binary counting!). But no 1s.
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Ah yeah, the CD-ROM upgrade kits.Rashidi wrote:i really miss the old days when {ISA} sound card come with an extra built-in IDE controler.
I think most of those were only partially-functional controllers. But I never had one, so I'm not sure.
Nowadays you can grab a PCI card with two IDE channels on it for cheap, though. Heck, even a basic RAID controller's not too expensive.
KHDownloadsSquall_Leonhart wrote:DirectInput represents all bits, not just powers of 2 in an axis.You have your 2s, 4s, 8s, 16s, 32s, 64s, and 128s(crash course in binary counting!). But no 1s.
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I don't think my friend tried to connect a HD to that IDE controller, but it was probably necessary to avoid using existing IDE controllers to prevent the CDROM from being installed... you couldn't really anticipate the massive configurations that was available out there when ISA was prominent.
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Yeah... and then they either refused to sit right and crashed the system, or they crashed it because VESA Local Bus was a terrible standard and fucked the signal timings up horrifically.odditude wrote:i miss the old vlb everything-on-one-card cards... a single card had 2 serial, 1 parallel, 1 gameport, 2 IDE, 1 floppy, and made those awe32+ide cards look short
KHDownloadsSquall_Leonhart wrote:DirectInput represents all bits, not just powers of 2 in an axis.You have your 2s, 4s, 8s, 16s, 32s, 64s, and 128s(crash course in binary counting!). But no 1s.
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Just from mechanical issues!Deathlike2 wrote:The extra long clusterfuck of a video card or just any card on that bus is asking for a disaster.
Even ignoring the fact that VLB was just dragging 486 address lines out and that caused timing errors right off the bat if you had too many cards in.
Or that changing CPUs could change your bus clock rate, and a lot of cards couldn't handle >33MHz clocks.
God, every time I'm reminded of VLB I cringe at how kludgy it was.
KHDownloadsSquall_Leonhart wrote:DirectInput represents all bits, not just powers of 2 in an axis.You have your 2s, 4s, 8s, 16s, 32s, 64s, and 128s(crash course in binary counting!). But no 1s.
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Re: Buying New Comp Parts...
Small bump
I've reinstalled XP recently while using the Intel RST 10.x series drives (not officially released, but are WHQL certified) AND fortunately it isn't causing any BSODs!
I set my system up for RAID mode on the Intel ICH10R controller, and have found that the RAID drivers tend to be less BSOD sensitive (through experimentation) than the AHCI drivers on XP. I have no idea why that is the case, but I hope that's useful to someone.
Although, between that time and now, I did get a BIOS update that updated Intel's RAID/ACHI BIOS to 1.20e, which is supposed to have faster detection for quicker booting. The annoying thing is that the addition JMicron controllers suck ass (I have to use it for the IDE portion, because I still have PATA HDs) because it's AHCI/RAID mode adds like 3+ XP "revolutions" (that moving line) to my boot time. Very annoying crap.
I've reinstalled XP recently while using the Intel RST 10.x series drives (not officially released, but are WHQL certified) AND fortunately it isn't causing any BSODs!
I set my system up for RAID mode on the Intel ICH10R controller, and have found that the RAID drivers tend to be less BSOD sensitive (through experimentation) than the AHCI drivers on XP. I have no idea why that is the case, but I hope that's useful to someone.
Although, between that time and now, I did get a BIOS update that updated Intel's RAID/ACHI BIOS to 1.20e, which is supposed to have faster detection for quicker booting. The annoying thing is that the addition JMicron controllers suck ass (I have to use it for the IDE portion, because I still have PATA HDs) because it's AHCI/RAID mode adds like 3+ XP "revolutions" (that moving line) to my boot time. Very annoying crap.
Continuing [url=http://slickproductions.org/forum/index.php?board=13.0]FF4[/url] Research...
Re: Buying New Comp Parts...
Very interesting. Considering my dad and I both have desktop motherboards with ICH10R and JMicron controllers. I have no trouble with AHCI, but then, I'm also running Windows 7, while he's still running Windows XP.
For him, setting up the AHCI drivers and enabling AHCI mode will hopefully fix an annoying issue he had with his optical drive randomly deciding to disappear completely from the device manager after working perfectly for over a month at a time. It usually solved itself by powering the system down for a while and then rebooting it.
And yes, he has to use the JMicron controller for PATA because he still has an older drive installed. Also, I don't think he's ever experienced a BSOD related to the hard drive controllers. Or anything else, for that matter.
For him, setting up the AHCI drivers and enabling AHCI mode will hopefully fix an annoying issue he had with his optical drive randomly deciding to disappear completely from the device manager after working perfectly for over a month at a time. It usually solved itself by powering the system down for a while and then rebooting it.
And yes, he has to use the JMicron controller for PATA because he still has an older drive installed. Also, I don't think he's ever experienced a BSOD related to the hard drive controllers. Or anything else, for that matter.
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Re: Buying New Comp Parts...
I've never had that happen, but that is strange. Sounds more like an issue with the drive... but the JMicron controller is primarily "ideal" for eSATA they are supposed to be used for... I had my optical drive originally in the JMicron port (now on the Intel port, because there's supposed to be some sort of power saving feature for optical drives in the newest drivers) and the most annoying attribute was that it was ALWAYS considered hot pluggable... even with a hard drive that was temporarily put in there. I used the drivers that is supposed to "detect" which mode it is in, but the damn drivers/hardware is clearly fail IMO. Only "plus" was that having a SATA hard drive plugged in reduced boot time, but that really seems like a bug or bad behavior to me.kode54 wrote:Very interesting. Considering my dad and I both have desktop motherboards with ICH10R and JMicron controllers. I have no trouble with AHCI, but then, I'm also running Windows 7, while he's still running Windows XP.
For him, setting up the AHCI drivers and enabling AHCI mode will hopefully fix an annoying issue he had with his optical drive randomly deciding to disappear completely from the device manager after working perfectly for over a month at a time. It usually solved itself by powering the system down for a while and then rebooting it.
I've had a BSOD, but my primary boot drive was a PATA hard drive at the time and wanted to switch from ACHI/RAID to IDE... the JMicron controller was PATA+2SATA port deal, and I thought it would be OK, but apparently not. Anyways, booting to the SATA drive on the Intel controller definately helped boot speed. Don't expect anything good with the JMicron poop.And yes, he has to use the JMicron controller for PATA because he still has an older drive installed. Also, I don't think he's ever experienced a BSOD related to the hard drive controllers. Or anything else, for that matter.
Continuing [url=http://slickproductions.org/forum/index.php?board=13.0]FF4[/url] Research...