>  I wonder how the windows drivers are made, because it appears that
>  they manage to work on all revisions. They work on mine, at least
>  that I know. Is there a way to detect the board revision?

The windows drivers don't have to work with different vendors cards,
which makes it alot simplier for them[1].  The "sound not working" issue
likely isn't a FlyVideo thing as I've seen reports about this for other
cards too.

>  Inserting
>  module saa7134 on my linux box issues the warning about
>  eprom missing, so, is there another way that the software could
>  automaticaly detect the board revision and act upon this
>  information?

The eeprom contains the PCI Subsystem ID (which can be used to identify
cards of different vendors).  Some cards don't have a eeprom, thus don't
have different subsystem IDs and thus can't be autodetected by the
driver (i.e. you have to pass card=n to saa7134).

  Gerd

[1] Well, until you decide to install two cards from different vendors.
    The Hauppauge bt878 drivers I have show *�hem* intresting behaviour
    if you plug in an Hauppauge WinTV and a TV-card from Terratec ...

-- 
You can't please everybody.  And usually if you _try_ to please
everybody, the end result is one big mess.
                                -- Linus Torvalds, 2002-04-20



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