drivers

better device drivers under Windows Vista?

Windows drivers have been really been hit or miss. Sometimes you get a driver package that works really well, sometimes not. You may find yourself trying multiple versions of the same driver, sometimes going with an older version because the newer version introduced a bug or a feature you didn't like.

Microsoft tried to fix a lot of driver issues by having the WHQL Certified driver system, "Driver Signing", or "Windows Logo testing". Microsoft says "Driver Signing lets you make sure that installed drivers are compatible with Windows." and "Installing device drivers that have not been digitally-signed by Microsoft may disable the system, allow viruses onto your computer, or otherwise impair the correct operation of your computer either immediately or in the future.".

What a bunch of shit. I've been building systems for 10 years now, and some of the best drivers I've used were not signed, and some of the absolute worst drivers I've used were digitally signed, Windows logo certified. A few years back, I purchased two different Diamond Multimedia video cards (Stealth II S220 and Monster Fusion). Diamond MM provided some signed drivers from Microsoft, and those drivers introduced some of the worst stability problems to my system, and besides that, they were terribly out dated compared to the unsigned, reference drivers, and lacked features of those drivers. Any company that pays Microsoft some money can get shitty drivers signed and Windows Logo certified. When I used reference drivers (drivers provided by the chipset manufacturer, and not the video card maker), or 3rd party or 'hacked' drivers, the video cards suddenly worked better, system stability improved, and I gained better support for games. Of course each time I went to install the drivers, Windows warned me that the drivers weren't signed, and "may cause issues" with how Windows worked. It was the total opposite of the way things really worked.

Microsoft may have a new way of letting people know which drivers to use, and they are letting the people decide themselves to help others out. It won't eliminate driver problems, but it will help a lot of people out in the long run, and allow the end users themselves tell Microsoft which signed drivers should lose their certification because they SUCK.

I just read this on Slashdot:

"Ars Technica is reporting that Microsoft is finally trying to do something about PC driver problems. A new crash-report-driven Driver Quality Rating system will be used in Windows Vista to rate drivers. Drivers that rate poorly in real world use by users will lose their logo certification status, which would be bad news for OEMs and the device manufacturers themselves. Maybe now submitting crash reports will feel more useful? This is long overdue."

The article can be found at arstechnica.com.

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64-bit TV Card drivers

While browsing the PlanetAMD64 forums, I came across a thread where someone had ported open source BT8x8 drivers to Windows XP x64 Edition.

I used the 64-bit driver file to update my STB TV PCI drivers. Even though I had an issue with DScaler giving me an error under Windows XP x64, the BT8x8 driver seemed to work just fine, and I was able to watch TV!

You can download the 64-bit STB TV PCI drivers from my drivers page HERE.

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unified CMedia 8738/9738 drivers

I have uploaded some new CMedia 8738 drivers to my site. These drivers are different from past CMI8738 drivers (VxD or WDM). These are unified WDM drivers designed to work with the CMI8738 chipset, and the new CMI9738 chipset.

Also, compared to the older drivers, they do not include their own Mixer program. This is good, since the CMedia mixer was pretty cheesy anyway, and offered volume control in the same way the Windows mixer already did. To control special functions of the sound card, a new icon has been added to your Control Panel. You can set 2/4 speakers there, change S/PDIF settings, and mess with EAX/Reverb settings there.

You can get the drivers HERE. They are about 1.6 Megs.

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got a new video card...

i just got a "Gainward Golden Sample GeForce 3 Ti 450" - basically just a hardware overclocked GeForce 3 Ti 200.

With my Celeron 1000MHz chip and the GeForce 3 Ti 200 clocked at 250/550, I got a 3DMark2001 score of 4767, and a CodeCreatures (removed) score of 10.7 (1024x768).

for a celebration, im giving out the link to the Detonator drivers i have been using for my GeForce 2 MX 200, and now my GeForce 3 Ti 200. they are a hacked set based on NVidia's 28.90 driver release (unofficial).
xeno_detonator_winxp_2890x.zip - 3.8 Megs (removed, use newer drivers).

Changes in the drivers:
- Refresh Rate Fix compatibility (no 60Hz!).
- Smaller Size (US/English) - NVidia's official drivers are 8.4 Megs!
- OverClock Panel enabled by default.
- Shortened the name of the icon added to the Control Panel.

got a new video card... Read More »

New CMedia Drivers... plus site updates

I've started changing bits and pieces of my site over to PHP... over the next few days I'm going to keep expanding with it, like having a common header and footer for different pages, and convert some old CGI and SSI stuff to PHP... Stuff should still work fine for the end-user.


I have some drivers for sound cards based on the CMedia 8738 chipset here. They are about 2 Megs. They are pretty much identicle to what one would find on the Windows Update site if you had a CMedia 8738 sound card, except for a changed Mixer icon, and a change in the setup so the Mixer doesn't load when Windows loads, so that makes my drivers better. :)

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