This is the Infineon Trusted Platform Module device on Hewlett-Packard NC4000/6000 series notebooks. The ATK0100 seems to be in laptops while the 0110 seems to be a desktop thing. There’s a distinct difference between the two. ASUS driver for ATK0110 ACPI device: (ASUS driver for ATK0100 ACPI device: (If you’re using an ASUS laptop or a machine with an ASUS motherboard, you might have an “ATK0110″ or “ATK0100″ unknown device this is something to do with ACPI on ASUS computers, and a driver is available on their site in the downloads section for your particular board. Installing the chipset drivers will deal with unknown devices like PCI bridges and the SMBus. There are far too many options for me to sensibly mirror here, so here’s links to the current download sites of the above: Using Intel’s Download Center site, search for “i945g”, pick the Mobile option if it’s a laptop, pick your version of Windows, and download whatever’s relevant (in this case, you’d want the executable (“exe”), non-Developer “Intel Graphics Media Accelerator Driver”.Ĭommon chipset manufacturers at the moment are Intel, AMD/ATi, NVidia (the “nForce” product line is motherboard chipsets), VIA and SiS. In the screenshot above, for example, this is the Intel i945G or GZ. Use CPU-Z to find out what chipset you have. Conversely, Windows XP includes full drivers for plenty of older boards – it fully supports i815 boards out of the box for example, as far as I know – so you may only have to download one or two other drivers. I’d recommend installing the chipset drivers first, as they frequently include drivers for onboard sound, networking or video, which can save you the time of hunting them down one by one. It’s even more perfect that it’s completely free. It’s a tiny program that’ll check out the vendor and device IDs of all your hardware, compare them to a near-encyclopedic list, and tell you exactly what you’re missing a driver for. Unknown Devices (UKD) gets used every day at work. Apart from being technically interesting, it’s the easiest way to find out what chipset your system has. I want to try repeat it with two PCI cards on one SB Link bus.CPU-Z is a free and frequently updated app that identifies key parts of your hardware – namely, the CPU, RAM, and motherboard specs. And in my ISA sound system I always use separately SBpro and SB16 compatible cards. "Clean SBpro" compatible cards do it usually much better. Yamaha will occupy 220/5/1 (or 220/7/1) and what about Trident? Can it work with 240/9/0/5 or 240/5/3/6 for example? I explain my wish: I found that SB16 compatible cards don't work well in SB/SBpro mode. Can I solder resistor on SIRQ line on mobo and get this option? If yes what value of resistance?Ģ) Is it true that Trident's wavetable connector can't work in pure DOS?ģ) Also I want to see what would happened if I connect YMF and Trident to PC/PCI connector together for getting SB+FM+SB16 compatibility. And Yamaha's SETUPDS doesn't let me choose SIRQ. I think you're main expert about PCI DOS sound on this site and I have a few questions if you don't mind.ġ) I have soldered 5 pins on my D850MV motherboard and found that SIRQ line hasn't resistor soldered, only DMA line has it. I bought 4DWave especially for solder 5-pin connector and test it on SB Link bus. If you had one, I would suggest an AWE64 which does great native DOS sound, and has perfect Win98 support. You sound like you are more focused on DOS gaming - which is strange as you locked yourself into a system without an ISA slot. ![]() ![]() Also, gradually into the Windows era until today, games transitioned from FM to PCM sound (which is why soundcards have died out), and things like effects engines (DSPs that change existing sound samples) and surround processors became the core value of sound cards. And most Windows sound cards do Midi really well, using Soundfonts in main memory - but they may not work well for DOS games. MIDI's golden age was the late 80s and early 90s, and from Windows 95 you could get by without it. I only need stereo, should I focus more on MIDI and FM?ĮAX is an effects engine, like how things sound different in a cathedral vs a small room.Ī3D simulates surround through stereo headphones or speakers, if you only have stereo it is actually what you want. Looking into those last two, they seem to be surround-related. I think it may be worth it to use two cards then - one for maximum DOS compatibility, one for Windows (with your choice of EAX or A3D). EAX and A3D cards can do DOS, although not optimally. Basically, out of EAX, A3D and OPL FM, you pick one.
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