Mercutio said:
OK, see, those are fightin' words.
Didn't intend to touch a nerve
Mercutio said:
Via stuff has been wonderful for years and years and years. I loved the MVP-based socket 7 boards and it's never been bad since. I *can* remember when Via wasn't worth the effort, but that was a looonnng time ago. The only Via issue I've had in the last 10 years has been with Creative Labs sound cards... and I'm inclined to believe the fault is Creative's.
I migrated through early Intel stuff both CPU and chipset into C64's and Amstrad CPC's and then Amiga's then got back into PC's with Cyrix and AMD CPU's utilising both SIS and VIA chipsets. In the early days it was fun trying to solve problems and learn along the way. As I grew older It became largely a frustrating and time consuming problem in constantly sorting out glitches and bugs, trying to chase up missing performance etc etc.
I think all of us unwittingly become used to and actually expect problems with a motherboard thinking it is quite normal and accepted for manufacturers to release bug ridden glitchy motherboards that seldom work as advertised with everything enabled. But god its so good when you get something that actually works properly
The last 2 VIA based boards I owned.. Asus A7V-333, Abit VA10 were both sterling examples of past experience with VIA based boards...
Poor memory performance
Poor IDE performance
Poor CPU benchmarks in comparison to.. well everything else!!!
Perpetual driver issues
Conflicts between own onboard peripherals
Total and random lockups. Might be good for days and then bang (Usually once I've dialed up the net. More money wasted)
BSODS and more BSODS
In the case of the Asus A7V333 I lost count of how many times I flashed the bios to the latest and greatest to fix bugs and then the updates stopped and a lot of problems remained.
Firewire could never be enabled without causing problems.
Onboard raid controller was a joke with constant timeouts and low write index warnings.
Why did I buy the very, very expensive full featured board for again?? Oh yeah, for Raid and Firewire and they're both useless. :evil:
I eventually gave up on ever trying to get the onboard raid controller to perform even moderately adequately (Promise can go jump before I buy their products again or anything utilising them and shame Asus for never working on the problem yourselves)
I found a cheap S/H Sil608 based IDE card even performed better than the onboard IDE controller and I could use 4 devices on it. :roll:
List goes on. I've tried to forget half the grief that overpriced POS gave me over the 3 years I owned it and then I was stupid enough to buy another VIA based board for the kids.
ABIT VA10
Often won't shut down.
Frequently won't power up unless you reset bios and leave for half an hour or switch off and on until it gets the hint.
System temps reported wrong.
Total and random lockups (good for days and then bang)
Only one bios update ever provided by ABIT (didn't fix wrongly reported temps or lockups)
Crash happy with games. Buy an AGP based card and still crash happy with games. Give me some peace kids!!! I'm too busy to sort it out now!!!!!
Then I started buying Nforce 2 boards and built systems for family members and myself.
Soltek 75FRN2 (no problems)
Soltec NV400-L64 (no problems)
Gigabyte 7N400-L (CPU temps reported too high otherwise no problems)
Epox 8RDA6+Pro (no problems excellent fully featured board and EVERYTHING WORKS)
Think I'm on a roll here
On the other hand, Via-based boards, just like Intel's, can be dealt with using a single system image - I can load the disk image I use on a K8M800-based Athlon 64 on a 7 year old Apollo Pro-based PII and it'll work.
I admit that using Via leads to a slight penalty in performance. I'm prepared to accept that, since Via is normally an early adopter of new technology and since Via's hardware is normally quite economical and reliable.
I s'pose we've both been lucky or unfortunate in our choices but by and large you'll see more complaints about VIA products than nvidia. They've done a pretty good job in a small amount of time.
On the other hand, I've found the nforce chipsets to be nothing but a pain in my ass. The IDE drivers suck more than a starving whore in a chocolate dick factory, and I have regular problems related to volume control on Soundstorm-enabled boards that I can only attirbute to a problem between DirectX and the sound driver. nforce boards are picky about memory, and I even have problems with USB on both of the nforce-based machines that I personally own (both the Asus boards I have from time to time tell me that my USB2 devices are not high speed, even though they are).
Bleh.
I'm aware that nforce had some USB problems with a certain chipset in USB drive boxes but other than that I don't recall reading about inherent problems with USB on nforce. I run two printers, mouse, various card readers etc off USB and never had a problem. Perhaps your issue is with Asus and their damn disregard for customer support and fixing their buggy overpriced shite.
I've always just used any old generic mem on nforce boards I've built and never had issues.
Had problems with IDE drivers and reverted back to Windows drivers. Went through same BS with VIA. Best to use what windows installs by default me thinks and leave alone if it aint broke.
Re Soundstorm.. When I was scouring the net yesterday on that new soundcard I found references to the soundstorm problem in same threads. I can't recall whether someone had a fix but they may have. I never had soundstorm myself so can't comment other than quite a few people missed the implementaion in later chipsets so it can't of been all bad.
Even a 1x slot is considerably faster than PCI. I'd be happy if I could slide a 6 channel SATA controller in a 1x slot, since that would be just enough to saturate the bus. Another 1x lane for a gigabit NIC and I'm having a hard time thinking what else I would do with PCI-express slots. HD video capture, maybe, but even that is doable on regular PCI.
Do they even make a raid card that fits in a 1x slot yet?
Well I suppose the aggrate of whats left is better being made available in one vessel then tied up amongst many less useful ones. With so many onboard devices these days it's hard to find uses for all the slots provided.
Since I sell far more machines than I build for myself, another moving part is just an annoyance. When I buy boards with active NB cooling, I pull the northbridge fan off entirely and stick in an 80mm case fan instead. At least I can count on the big guy lasting longer than six months. I *do not* want someone calling me to service a PC just because the cheap-ass fan on their northbridge died.
I also don't want to stock replacement coolers. What a waste.
I know what you mean. Half the time the damn NB fans are added for no other reason than to appeal to those that are intent on ricing up the looks of the inside of their case.
Still from my perspective where I'm responsible and capable of the upkeep of my own machines they don't bother me. The ones I have had that have gone noisy I've taken apart and cleaned and oiled etc and they've been resurrected and I've never had one actually fail yet!. I've had more problems with CPU fans than those little things on NB chipsets and graphics cards etc. If I was building a HTPC or after something I needed really quiet I would replace it.