It's a good idea on new systems, or on systems upgraded
or changed in a significant way, to select the
system BIOS' option to "Load optimum settings" or
equivalent. In some cases, one or more registers in
the CMOS memory might have gotten junk values inserted
by a previous operator or by a power glitch.
This can give you the assurance that settings known
to the manufacturer to operate successfully will
be loaded and used.
Of course, you should note any custom settings before
doing this.
Perhaps in the cases noted, the processor or the memory
was on the ragged edge of operating at the given speed.
Changing the devices brought in more elbow room.
There are also bootleg chips out there that are mislabeled
in order to bring a higher price. :(
Bote
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Larry Baird
> Sent: Wednesday, 17 November, 1999 11:33
> To: Thomas David Rivers; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: ASUS P2B-S and FreeBSD 3.3-RELEASE
>
>
> >> I suspect memory at this point... given your other failure modes of
> >> data corruption (checksum errors from cpio), kernel panics, etc.
>
> > Yep - David Kelley suggested I slow the memory down.
>
> > That improved things; but didn't fix them - I'm off to buy new
> > memory today...
> I recently had a similar problem with a ASUS P2B-F motherboard and a
> 450 PIII. Random crashes for no apparent reason once or twice a day.
> I disabled cache on the 450 and everything worked great for days.
> Arranged a processor swap with the vendor I bought the processor
> from. Haven't had a crash since I put the new processor in.
>
> Larry
>
> --
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Larry Baird
> Global Technology Associates, Inc. | Orlando, FL
> Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] | TEL 407-380-0220, FAX 407-380-6080
>
>
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