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Windows 7 headache....
I like 7 - really I do. But its beginning to irritate me over one issue.
The bugger is solid as all get out - except for an audio problem. I run onboard sound - its a realtek HD Audio chip. Has run like a champ in xp and Vista. Runs solid on 7 for some things - but others it is as flaky as it comes. DoW Soulstorm crashes within 2 minutes of gameplay. Videos from the digital camera are hit and miss in causing crashes due to audio. Of course I went and updated my drivers - even tried using base manufacturer drivers - still same issue every time. I know its audio because the audio stream hangs right before I BSOD. Onboard audio is normally as solid (if less than stellar performing) as it comes. For 7 to struggle with a MB standard chipset - and its handling of errors - is disappointing. Still its a solid os - but I am not happy with it at the moment. |
My onboard is solid with Win7, but X-fi is another matter. No crashes, but tearing, though it could also be due too crappy Creative 64bit drivers, or ****ty Alchemy, or a combination of the 3. Also my only major headache.
Seriously, audio is a mess since Vista. :nope: |
I hope all this stuff is fixed for the public release...:yep:
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yea my x-fi is pretty much un functional with 7. not even detected
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Actually I'm using both RC x64 and RTM x64.
My onboard sound card is a realtek High Definition chipset. I'm using native windows 7 driver and the realtek versions. This was my fall back since X-Fi didn't work in my rig before yesterday. I've just restored my X-Fi extreme music card that came with my Dell XPS730 but BSOD when I had vista 32bit and 64bit. Yesterday I tried someone's idea to get the X-Fi drivers to work and to my surprise it works no BSOD... http://en.community.dell.com/forums/....aspx#19539547 Quote:
Give it a try. It can't hurt. I did it alittle different but it works. goodluck, WH |
Oh, for the love of...
Turns out my audio trouble was because of Dynamic Energy Saver, a tool that comes for DCS enabled motherboards from Gigabyte. It works by enabling only so many power-phases as necessary. Voltage and frequency are also throttled, but that happens without the tool as well, by EIST and C1E. Not sure if the phase regulation or the software itself causes the issues, but I'm guessing the utility since I don't recall any issues running it in 32-bit OS. :-? And with that, all my Win7 headaches are gone. :yeah: Now if only they could make it a little more affordable... maybe I'll just get a version for 1 user. :hmmm: |
It honestly seems to me you only get what you pay for.
It also seems to me you should be telling MS this since your sorta beta testing it. Glad to hear that this is a minor problem tho. |
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I'm not sure, was thinking of sending Gigabyte a mail, not MS. DES is not Win7 compatible, and considering it interacts with the MB on a hardware level, it's actually not surprising to cause issues. Almost all software, except video and audio drivers, aren't Win7 compatible. You can use Vista drivers no problem, even for video and audio, the only thing acting up is this DES thing. Heck, for all I know it could be a BIOS issue; had to flash it to a beta for quad-core support (P35 board). Moved to 4GB RAM, quad-core and 64-bit OS at the same time, so it was a little tricky to diagnose. :hmmm: In short, like I said, I have no problems with Win7 at all. Not bad for a free trial. :up: |
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Aye, definetly great boards. This is the first problem that is possibly related to the MB.
Gigabyte for life. :yep: |
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