Originally posted by: ELopes580
hmm, I seem to recall issues with Via mobos and Creative sound cards a while back and an unrelated issue with southbridge IDE performance. Did Via address the problem?? Yes, by saying something to the effect of "buy our new chipset..." Since at the time it was mostly Via that was producing chipsets for AMD's Athlon line, this surely didnt help AMD rep as quality. Did ppl get up and flame Via for not doing anything? No. But when Intel address the problem and then issues an alert,which i dont even think it is classified as an offical recall, ppl get all crazy......
See if Via would have responded the same way.... I highly doubt it.
But then ppl have the freaking nerve to accuse Intel of terrible quality..... Get real!!
Originally posted by: AWhackWhiteBoy
Elopse,it was a PCI latency issue with CREATIVE CARDS,not every single card on the marke(you can patch it too,very simple issue). much less almost all the ram on the market.
edit: the true irony in this situation is that Intel refused to license anyone else to be able to make chipsets to go with their Pentium-M line...
Originally posted by: ELopes580
See if Via would have responded the same way.... I highly doubt it.
Originally posted by: ShawnD1
Originally posted by: ELopes580
See if Via would have responded the same way.... I highly doubt it.
That's why VIA sucks balls. Go for the nForce chipset 😉.
Originally posted by: lookouthere
Originally posted by: ELopes580
hmm, I seem to recall issues with Via mobos and Creative sound cards a while back and an unrelated issue with southbridge IDE performance. Did Via address the problem?? Yes, by saying something to the effect of "buy our new chipset..." Since at the time it was mostly Via that was producing chipsets for AMD's Athlon line, this surely didnt help AMD rep as quality. Did ppl get up and flame Via for not doing anything? No. But when Intel address the problem and then issues an alert,which i dont even think it is classified as an offical recall, ppl get all crazy......
See if Via would have responded the same way.... I highly doubt it.
But then ppl have the freaking nerve to accuse Intel of terrible quality..... Get real!!
intel has invested much more money on development than Via does. Via ia a relatively small chipset company compare to Intel. So that's why people flame intel for doing such terrible quality. Intel should have known better when their chipset aren't good.
Originally posted by: VirtualLarry
I thought that ATI had a bus license. (Actually, doesn't the P-M use the same bus as the P4 does? Or are there differences because it's a mobile chip? I know that the basics are the same, QDR and all that.)
Btw, the change to PCI latency settings was just a workaround, the true issue was that Via never implemented "bus park" functionality in their PCI bus, because the actual spec listed it as an "optional" part, even though it was de-facto required for proper operation by most PCI cards on the market. Intel's designs had always supported it, and the cards were designed to use it. Via took the cheap/easy way out, and had severe compatibility/performance problems because of it.
Hewlett-Packard on Friday said a design flaw in some common notebook memory modules could cause serious problems with the PCs.
An HP spokesperson said the memory modules include 128-MByte, 256-Mbyte and 512-Mbyte units from Samsung, Infineon Technologies, Micron Technology and Winbond Electronics.
Originally posted by: Pandaren
DID ANYONE ACTUALLY READ THE LINKED ARTICLE???
Hewlett-Packard on Friday said a design flaw in some common notebook memory modules could cause serious problems with the PCs.
An HP spokesperson said the memory modules include 128-MByte, 256-Mbyte and 512-Mbyte units from Samsung, Infineon Technologies, Micron Technology and Winbond Electronics.
The problem is not with the Intel chipsets - it's a problem with the memory modules.
There seems to be a problem with the reading comprehension skills of some people on these forums. Perhaps they should be recalled to elementary school for remedial English. :|
Originally posted by: Pandaren
DID ANYONE ACTUALLY READ THE LINKED ARTICLE???
Hewlett-Packard on Friday said a design flaw in some common notebook memory modules could cause serious problems with the PCs.
An HP spokesperson said the memory modules include 128-MByte, 256-Mbyte and 512-Mbyte units from Samsung, Infineon Technologies, Micron Technology and Winbond Electronics.
The problem is not with the Intel chipsets - it's a problem with the memory modules.
There seems to be a problem with the reading comprehension skills of some people on these forums. Perhaps they should be recalled to elementary school for remedial English. :|
so 4 different companies somehow magically made the exact same flaw that only appears on the mentioned Intel chipsets?
did YOU even read it?
Originally posted by: Pandaren
It is possible if they simply copied a reference design that one of the companies put out.
so 4 different companies somehow magically made the exact same flaw that only appears on the mentioned Intel chipsets?
And what in the article says its an Intel problem? The text of the article clearly states that the problem is with the memory modules and not the chipsets.
did YOU even read it?
I should also add that the 845xM and 855xM series chipsets are different designs by different design teams (845 is a desktop division product, while 855 is a notebook division, Intel Israel design).
I do not see why people are jumping to conclusions that this is an intel problem. If there were serious memory problems with common modules, the Dell support forums would be alight with infuriated end users.
Originally posted by: AWhackWhiteBoy
Originally posted by: VirtualLarry
Btw, the change to PCI latency settings was just a workaround, the true issue was that Via never implemented "bus park" functionality in their PCI bus, because the actual spec listed it as an "optional" part, even though it was de-facto required for proper operation by most PCI cards on the market. Intel's designs had always supported it, and the cards were designed to use it. Via took the cheap/easy way out, and had severe compatibility/performance problems because of it.
This was when it first came out,i'm not sure if they are licensing people now. I know Via had chipsets ready to go and Intel refused to give them the license to use them.
Originally posted by: AWhackWhiteBoy
As for the PCI issue, I looked it up again for the first time in a long time.
"High PCI-traffic due to the use of sound-, tv-, videocapturing-cards or NICs, causes data loss on the VIA 686B southbridge which is used with the VIA KT133A/KT133 chipset. The problem will occur especially on computers using a Creative Labs Soundblaster Live! soundcard. When the CPU waits for 3 busmaster requests until it accesses the bus itself a buffer might overflow and data will be lost. VIA offers a patch that will allow the CPU to wait only for 2 requests preventing the overflow and data loss. This patch might affect audio- and videostreams which will have dropouts due to the minimized bandwith. Since the IDE-controller of the 686B is affected by the data loss it is a serious problem. It is rumoured that a new revision of the chipset has been released to fix the problem.
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
But But, intel puts so much more time and money into testing and quality assurance than AMD
Originally posted by: zerodeefex
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
But But, intel puts so much more time and money into testing and quality assurance than AMD
hahahahahaha, my gf's dad tried to tell me (not knowing my mom worked for AMD for over 15 years), that "AMD is going to break. We have a lot more testing and quality assurance. They have serious quality issues. We never have any problems after it leaves the factory."
Edit: Forgot to mention he works at Intel.
Originally posted by: AzNKiD
i just ordered dell 600m yesterday, should i worry about this? its 1.5 dothan and i plan to buy 256mb from cruical ram.