On Thu, Sep 27, 2007 at 06:54:28PM +0200, Carl-Daniel Hailfinger wrote: > > Well, as I said, I tested superiotool on multiple machines. I should > > be able to just crack the case on a machine and spot it on the > > motherboard, I assume? > > Yes, but we'll probably be able to tell it from the short output without > opening any machine.
Looking at the actual chip would still be useful sometimes, for instance to spot datasheet ID/rev errors (e.g. when the chip says it's a different chip than what the IDs tell you). As for datasheets: http://www.ite.com.tw/product_info/PC/pc_product_info_2.asp http://www.winbond.com/hq/enu/ProductAndSales/ProductLines/ComputerLogicIC/ http://www.winbond.com/hq/enu/ProductAndSales/ProductReference/EOLProducts/ http://www.smsc.com/main/datasheet.html ftp://ftp.smsc.com/pub/datasheets/ ftp://ftp.smsc.com/pub/discontinued/ http://www.fintek.com.tw/eng/products.asp?BID=1&SID=17&layer=0 Probably lots more which I missed right now (just google for the Super I/O name, that should find you datasheets for almost all of them). Hm, maybe we should add a "Datasheets" wiki page with links? Uwe. -- http://www.hermann-uwe.de | http://www.holsham-traders.de http://www.crazy-hacks.org | http://www.unmaintained-free-software.org
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