I'm glad to see these chipsets coming out now too, and I also hope that Via has done some major revisiting on their PCI implementation.
Sorry to take the thread back off topic for a moment, but some people in this forum need to wake up:
The PCI issue that has come up is very real, while it may not affect a lot of users, gamers, office users and hackers, there are MANY people who have invested in systems that SHOULD have been able to work as advertised. For example video editing, many users are finding that because the defects in the Via PCI bus their videos are not editing well, I happen to be one of those users. I may not push the PCI bus with disk I/O like the majority of users are complaining about, but I need to send plenty of data to RAM/CPU. There are even more issues, how about a gigabit ethernet card which could push around 125MBytes/sec, your Raid array would be very ineffective in combination with this configuration? I'm glad that I decided against building a server around a Via motherboard a little while back.
Nicolt, this isn't just a KT266/A issue, this is also a KT133/A issue. It has even been observed on MVP3 and MVP4 systems. Realize that a lot of people who have encountered this problem are really aggravated with a company like Via who decides that they are only going to issue a patch that searches for certain Raid controllers and patches those controllers only, rather than fixing the entire bus, which I realize they might not be in a position to do, due to the design. That doesn't alter the issue. Yes, if someone sells me a product that is supposed to be able to send 133MBytes/sec over a bus, it had darn well better be able to. Call it Fud if you like, it's a nice, easy excuse not to address a serious isse.
As far as whether I'm just spreading FUD, but here are the facts. Every system I build is AMD/Via based and will be AMD/Via based because they do have good price/performance, UNTIL the next time I need to build a power workstation to handle video editing, disk i/o, or network i/o that encroaches on the reduced amount of PCI throughput that a Via based system can provide. Unless I find out that Via has fixed these problems, they simply are not a competitor in that arena. Another reason to be concerned about this issue is what it does to Amd's image. AMD has a wonderful product that has it's image tarnished by any botch ups that Via has since they are very dependent on one another.
This is not an issue that we need to just let "die" because it's ok to by ripped off a little bit.