I thought AMD bought ATI, not Nvidia....
On 8/15/07, Mitch Gore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > So if Via arent the best with ivtv and SiS arent good. What do I use? > Intel? Nvidia only makes chipsets for AMD being they are the same company > now. > > I will look see if maybe there is a BIOS update (could that fix it?) If > you were to pick out a good motherboard which would you choose? > > My requirements would be mATX, LGA 775, at least has a digital sound out > header (i have a PCI bracket), and AGP. > > Thanks, > Mitchell > > On 8/15/07, William Powers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > Mitch Gore wrote: > > > > > > 3. Try also adding "elevator=deadline" as a kernel > > parameter. Some > > > sources claim it proides better i/o performance than cfq for this > > > purpose. > > > > > > Bill > > > > > > > > > > > > What exaclty does this do? > > It changes the kernel I/O scheduler from the default (cfq for recent > > kernels) to the deadline algorithm. The chance of that fixing your > > problem by itself is virtually nil. At best, it might improve things > > somewhat. > > > > > I have tried to move my cards around my between my firewire, pvr, > > > usb, sound card, video card there is always overlap with something. > > > Do you guys think this is a hardware issue or a software issue? If i > > > could just get a new MB and not mess with all the "shoting in the > > > dark" fixes I would just do that. > > If you ran the dd if=/dev/video0 of= bla.mpg test and got the same > > result, then I think at this point it is more likely to be hardware than > > software. I once got DMA errors because the SATA data cable wasn't > > firmly connected to the hard drive and that caused it to default to a > > low data rate transfer mode. PATA cables are also notorious for being > > problem sources. But if you're sure the cable(s) are good and the hard > > drive(s) are good and the hard drive is running properly in dma mode, > > then I guess that leaves motherboard chipset issues. I've never used an > > SIS chipset under linux so I can't speak at all to how well they > > perform. But even if they perform well in general there could be a > > problem with your particular board. If you have any other motherboard > > lying around, even an old P-3 or Athlon XP board, I'd suggest you try > > that before you shell out for a new motherboard. If that one works ok, > > then you can buy a new motherboard with some confidence that your money > > will be well spent. > > > > Bill > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > ivtv-users mailing list > > [email protected] > > http://ivtvdriver.org/mailman/listinfo/ivtv-users > > > > > _______________________________________________ > ivtv-users mailing list > [email protected] > http://ivtvdriver.org/mailman/listinfo/ivtv-users >
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