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Comments on ‘VIA heralds end of third-party PC chipset biz’Monday 11th August 2008 15:10 GMT
VIA, before you go...
Anonymous Coward • Monday 11th August 2008 15:25 GMT
Can I have the week-or-so of my life back that I've spent trying to get your shitty motherboard chipsets to work with numerous graphics cards / soundcards / OS's / and, once, even a USB adapter card using YOUR OWN FUCKING USB CHIPSET. Good riddance. Don't let the door hit you on the arse on the way out. Well
Anonymous Coward • Monday 11th August 2008 15:31 GMT
At least Via can concentrate on their ultra-mini-tiny computer business. Mobile ITX should be a revolution- an x86 PC of a size you could comfortably fit in your wallet. If they're available at a decent price point (a couple of hundred quid) I can see them really taking off- I for one can think of a load of different places I could use them! It's the one with the 10-machine server farm and battery pack built into its lining. Soldiering on?
bobbles31 • Monday 11th August 2008 15:35 GMT
Surely Nvidia are Soldering on? eh eh, get it? (The one with a Maplins catalogue in the pocket, thanks) KT7 Raid
adnim • Monday 11th August 2008 16:24 GMT
There's a Via chipset on the Abit KT7 RAID mobo in my garage. It was my main PC for a while even had my 1Ghz TBird doing 1.4+Ghz on it. It has been running 24/7 with the occasional reboot for about 5 years now although at 1.1Ghz. It is used as a media/file server. When competition thins in any area it is a sad thing. Re: KT7 Raid
Charles • Monday 11th August 2008 18:21 GMT
Not necessarily. As long as there is SOME competition, the situation is far from unbearable. In fact, some may welcome it since it helps narrow options while still keeping the competitive spirit going. The performance graphics market has been a two-horse race for years (only recently has Intel declared intentions to enter it) with barely a complaint. Like losing a friend
Tammer Salem • Monday 11th August 2008 18:28 GMT
Wow, i'm going to miss these guys. Yeah their chipsets weren't the most stable, but once you got them running, most of their components would chug along for years. Also you can't argue they were probably the best bang for buck. (I wonder if i'm going to lose driver support on my via motherboard, sound card, and graphics card i've been running for 5 years now) Tux? Becuase I've built many low cost systems linux systems with this chipset Re: VIA, before you go...
Olly Simmons • Monday 11th August 2008 19:41 GMT
One week?!?!?!? You lucky sod, I lost that on my first VIA mobo, and I had at least three others that were worse. Alas the things you do when the wallet is light. Consolidation of the market
Thomas • Monday 11th August 2008 19:46 GMT
Will hopefully at least make trying to get all your Windows drivers to play together nicely a little easier? But...
Anonymous Coward • Monday 11th August 2008 21:26 GMT
How will we spot low-quality MBs with flaky drivers if they no longer sport the VIA scarlet letters? Still Running
Graham Lockley • Monday 11th August 2008 22:23 GMT
Still running a KT7A here as rip/encode/burn machine and its as stable as hell. Still have one or two bad memories of AMD K62's on VIA chipsets tho.... was it the drivers or windows?
Bo Pedersen • Monday 11th August 2008 22:27 GMT
I remember the biggest via problems I had were with windows ME the rest worked fine as long as you installed everything in the right order that was on 98 Mobo drivers Graphics Drivers Sound Drivers Modem Drivers (plugging this in at the end) :) ah them were the days and they were stable and fast and very very cheap of course stability depended on which cheap brand of motherboard you bought some cheap ones were very bad, others were great. pcchips being bad lex being not too bad its all just way too easy these days too :) Dont worry about Intel's SLI
Alan W. Rateliff, II • Monday 11th August 2008 23:09 GMT
Intel is really good at screwing up video, so were I Nvidia, I would not be concerned about Intel and SLI. Paris, really good at screwing it up in video. MVP3 anyone?
Hayden Clark • Monday 11th August 2008 23:40 GMT
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaagh! If you installed the Via driver (on Win95, this was when Win98 was too new) the IDE driver couldn't cope with simultaneous transfers to multiple devices. Like when you install software from an IDE CD-ROM to your IDE hard drive. VC5 installer fortunately checksummed the installed files, and spotted it for me. Oh, and the PCI bus was set up wrong, so simultaneously drawing to the screen and playing audio didn't work. I restarted my machine so many times the CD-ROM drive died. The PCI timing bug continued until quite recently. Yay !
vincent himpe • Tuesday 12th August 2008 02:59 GMT
No more crummy Usb 2.0 chipsets that dont support large packet throttling No more turds of usb to ata bridges that corrupt data. No more half arsed IEEE1394 ( fireWire) chipsets that are not OHCI compliant No more half baked PCI implementations that don't correctly support bus mastering No more crummy chipsets that need a ton of software 'drivers' to patch the bugs in them. Via never wanted to pay for licences of USB , PCI or IEEE1394. They made cleanroom 99.99% compatible stuff. Now it's just a matter of time before intel's Atom smashes that 'eden' cpu as well. Via sucks anyway
Anonymous Coward • Tuesday 12th August 2008 03:23 GMT
Perhaps this is a good thing. So far, Via's own chips and chipsets seem to not have been given the proper attention. I personally won't touch Via based boards with a barge pole, they're nothing but trouble, both with Windows and Linux. If this means Via is now going to put 100% effort into their own stuff, their mobos might actually suck less, which would be a good thing, cause real competition is always a good thing. Perhaps Via will learn a lesson from AMD. The Geode LX800 chipset rocks and consumes less energy, no driver problems. Windows, Linux, BSD or VxWorks, they always work like a charm. The period for commenting on this story has finished |
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