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I recently added a new hard drive (as a slave drive) for extra memory. but the video files i have on the new hard drive skip and is kinda choppy the first time you play the video. i was told to try to update the driver for my motherboard but i dont know who manufactured it.

2006-07-20 16:49:26 · 8 answers · asked by condor_biker 2 in Computers & Internet Hardware Other - Hardware

8 answers

This is a common problem...

(( ladyfirst, in her answer below gives a link to a 4 meg download,
free, that I tried, and like hundreds of similar applications,
may interrogate your BIOS, and analyze your system, and
may give you details simply by running the program... I would
suggest trying her method. I ran it on my computer, and it was
VERY good at comming up with " MOST" data, although, digging
up the specific REVISION NUMBER of the BIOS may be out,
still, you might be given the actual www.address of the manufacturer to search for more info....

Try these links with the software, and see if they all agree, :

EVEREST

http://www.majorgeeks.com/download4181.html

COMPUTER CENSUS

http://tucows.com/preview/502506

ASTRA32

http://tucows.com/preview/348128

MvPCinfo

http://tucows.com/preview/404367

(( there are dozens of these types of programs, and you can
use yahoo search or dogpile.com search to find a great many more... _)

Iff this fails, then you
can just open the case and, if lucky, can read the manufacturer's
name and model number somewhere on the board using a
bright light. You may even find the REVISION number. Sometimes the information is obscured by the AGP card or
a PCI card, but these are not difficult to momentarily remove....
otherwise, follow BELOW : ))

[[ Another tip.... if you are "UPDATING" your motherboard with
a BIOS FLASH, proceed very carefully. Make certain your floppy
is 100% CLEAN ( use a floppy cleaner disk with white fiber disk,
and alcohol bottle in the kit... sometimes available at the dollar store, but well worth it... test a few read/ writes, and a scandisk
on a newly written floppy ).
SAVE the old BIOS , even though you don't have to. AND, if
ANYTHING GOES WRONG DO NOT SHUT OFF THE POWER...!
If there is a disk read / write error, get another disk, on another
computer, and use the other disk ( which the computer would not know was a new one, and continue... ) You can even, CAREFULLY exchange the floppy macnine itself.... ANYTHING, but remove the
POWER... ! ! ! Read the instructions carefully, and print them out. And, again, it is vitally important to know the correct revision number, and make certain that it is valid for the BIOS revision
you are using to update....
It is also a good idea to have a battery backup UPS running
during the BIOS FLASH, so that a tiny power glitch would not
destroy your BIOS, --- if anything went wrong, your entire motherboard would be useless...

After upgrading the BIOS, then you can use the CHIPSET upgrade software that will update things, typically like AGP to
PCI bus drivers, PCI drivers, clock timing upgrades, and sound,
lan, modem, etc. drivers if any are onboard. ]]

IFF these methods fail, then:

1/ Rip apart your entire computer and read BOTH sides of the
motherboard and all the sticky labels, particularly on the
first side of the last card slot, and write down all the numbers and
names, and hope that there is something in ENGLISH, that
looks like a model name, and a revision number.
If you are lucky, the NAME is in bold white screen print on the
top, and the REVISION number is printed in a corner somewhere
or on a sticky label on or near the BIOS, with something like
rev. 1.02b
If you are experienced you can sometimes tell who probably made the board by the colours, the way the traces are made,
the configuration, the chips used etc, and some of the codes
written on the sticky labels...

Sometimes the label and model numbers are on the BACK,
which is a real pain, since you "HAVE " to remove the board
itself...

2/ you can try to stop the BIOS BOOT sequence at the start of
the BOOT procedure and read the information on the screen.
Sometimes it will STATE IN ENGLISH the model and make
and revision number as part of the BIOS routine,,,,, JOY
Sometimes it will just give you a long BIOS REVISION
code
like Ac00287-BC8djJ-0030300228-12kidj or something, and
you have to go to the BIOS manufacturers website and
look up the code on a list.... ( AMIBIOS, etc. )

I answered this question just a while ago, repeated here with
more details....

__________________________________________________

When you first start your computer, how do you get the screen to stop so you can read what it says.?

I am not talking about getting to the bios.
Additional Details

6 days ago
The reason I am asking this is my computer cannot see my cdrom drive. One of the answers somewhere was to look when the computer starts and see if it lists the cd rom drive.

6 days ago
The pause break works. How do I get it to resume loading after I hit pause break?

( to resume, press ENTER )

4 answers
You've already answered this question.

robin_graves
1 week ago

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Best Answer - Chosen by Asker

I put your question on my watch list.
The answer to hit the PAUSE / BREAK is 'sort of "
correct, once the first page is finished and the POST
starts, pause will usually work, but the VERY first
screen, with the BIOS revision number usually
blinks so fast that it is impossible to stop on
many computers. This BIOS revision number is
often a key to determining what revision, what
manufacturer, and what company the computer
is .... I have hundreds of computers, and there is
no "rule " to get the screen to stop.... Sometimes,
pause may work... but usually on 286's or 386's,
-- the new computers are too fast to control...

(( Since I have ... HUNDREDS .... of computers,
most come with no manual, and HUNDREDS of these
motherboards have NO MARKINGS whatsoever that
cross reference to any known motherboard by any known
manufacturer. In fact, countless mothrboards are
illegal clones, first commissioned by a large, known
corporation, and then "cloned" cheaply at the factory,
deliberately hidding all identifying markings. The only way
to track down what the board was originally, is to get the
printed BIOS version on the first screen, and go to
the BIOS manufacturer's website, and cross reference
the BIOS # with known listings. In many cases, the
sequence, even then, will list A046B1A-004124 as " other",
or, the cloning assembly line has put in a BIOS revision
number that is not listed at all... Since many of the hundreds
of motherbaords I bump into, are strange, and from around the
world, there are many instances where the Manufacturer,
the Board Name and the Revision number white printed
clearly on the board, mean nothing, with no web search, and
no technical website postings finding anything or anyone who has
heard of the company or the board... There is an exception to
every rule { all motherboards are clearly identified in white
printing }, and I get a great many of the unidentifiable boards,
simply BECAUSE, no one else knows what to do with them !
see my website, kidbots.com ))

I hope someone comes up with something I have never
seen before.... good luck.

robin

Asker's Rating:
Most informative answer.

____________________________________________

As you can see, finding a manufacturer is not a guaranteed process... the odds are, though, that you will find the information
easily - strange boards are getting rare...

FINALLY...

If updating the BIOS, the DRIVERS, and the software viewer
and CODECS does not work, then you have an issue, not with
the software, but with the hardware - is the harddrive a fast one
with large cache? is the cabelling the best configuration?, do you have an ATA drive needing an 80 wire cable, and have only installed a 40 wire? Is there another machanical and BIOS
location that allows the hardddrive to function faster? Are there
settings in your Operating System that allocate more RAM to the
software viewer, so that it runs faster? Is there another Viewer program that is more efficiently coded that will speed up the
transfere reate, so that the videos run smoothly? etc. etc....

There may be other issues here that are not immediately apparent. On the new drive, go to the manufacturers website and
see how much cache ram is on the Drive board, and what
the RPM ( Pevolutions per minute ) speed is. 7,200 is normal
today, and higher end drives are 10,000 RPM. 5,000 is middle of
the road, and 3,000's are slow, etc. You can compare the same
read times and latency and RPM for the new drive and your old
one to see if there is a major performance drop.
I would also search around for better designed viewer software.
There are any out there, and you might be surprised with much
better performance.


hope this helps

robin

2006-07-20 17:11:05 · answer #1 · answered by robin_graves 4 · 0 0

Slave drive for mor RAM that is not correct at all, All u have to do is open the system case and look on the motherboard. You do not have to take the whole computer apart. That would be a waste of time.

2006-07-20 22:43:29 · answer #2 · answered by Anointed71 4 · 0 0

There's a little application called "Everest" that you can download. It will tell you all that information and more.

I've used it for a couple of years and I love it.

Quote:
EVEREST Home Edition is a freeware system information, system diagnostics and benchmarking solution for home PC users, based on the award-winning EVEREST Technology. It offers the world's most accurate system information and diagnostics capabilities, including online features, memory benchmarks, hardware monitoring, and low-level hardware information.

You can read about it, and download it from here:
http://www.majorgeeks.com/download4181.html

2006-07-20 17:24:20 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Try Yahoo search for "motherboard monitor 5" .

2006-07-20 17:29:18 · answer #4 · answered by pfc_weiss 5 · 0 0

Your memory might not be enough to run video from another hard drive. If this is so then try to install the video file player or software to the other drive so that its all working on the same drive. Reading from one drive to another takes memory for video and alot of it. Try also to run in lower resolution this is adjusted in display properties. For as telling who makes the mother board, try calling the company who makes the computer.

2006-07-20 17:17:20 · answer #5 · answered by d_1799 1 · 0 0

Biostar is low grade. If you want a good motherboard, go for Asus, MSI, or Gigabyte.

2016-03-16 02:48:16 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You have to physically take the motherboard out and look at the small prints on it.

2006-07-20 16:59:43 · answer #7 · answered by ? 5 · 0 0

I'd go with LadyFirst's answer. Get yourself the Everest Home edition or PC Wizard - they can usually tell you wonders about your PC.

Have fun !!

2006-07-20 19:57:12 · answer #8 · answered by Ash 2 · 0 0

you need to open the case and look for the marking on the mobo. you will need manufacturer and model number and build number

2006-07-20 17:11:25 · answer #9 · answered by johnman142 6 · 0 0

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