thanks for that derek. i did not realise that the SiS sound system driver
posted on the sis website was a LAN Driver. actually i haven't tried
compiling them either. have u written to them to change the link or do u
want me to do it? I have waited long for a sound driver and am preety eager
:-)

but I must say that the lan driver works on my laptop. i only had problems
with the display and the sound drivers.

thanks
navin




-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Derek
Jennings
Sent: Wednesday, 5 September 2001 9:11 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [newbie] Sis 735 / ECS K7S5a and Linux


For those of you following the thread last week about the new SIS735 chipset
and the Elite K7S5A motherboard, I have received my motherboard, and
installed Mandrake 8.0 on it, and can share the following results.

The K7S5A seems well constructed, but only 1 IDE cable is supplied.
Two negative worth watching out for.

Firstly, if the CMOS gets corrupted you must move a strap to clear the CMOS
and leave it in this position for 10 minutes. Initially I found I had to do
this several times until I realised that the PCMCIA adapter card I had
fitted
really did not like being in either of the two lower PCI slots. Once I moved
the PCMCIA adapter to a different slot,  the Bios was rock solid.

Second, I had read that the latest Bios was an improvement, but the manual
instructs you to use the wrong BIOS flash utility. (The CD has 3 different
utilities on it) Elite's web site tells you the correct utility to use.

The Bios does not permit you to change the clock multiplier, or the front
side bus speed, (other than the basic 100MHz/133MHz) so the board is not
oreinted for hardcore overclockers.


On the other hand the board is VERY fast without any overclocking.
I have fitted it with a 1.2G 266MHz fsb Athlon , 256M Crucial PC2100 DDR
memory and Abit Siluro Geforce II MX video card . It is rock solid with no
instability at all. I am not equipped to compare it with other motherboards,
but if we take the word of the major review sites like Toms Hardware,
Anandtech, or AMDmb, then it is right at the top of Athlon motherboard
performance, at the lowest price of any comparable board.

How about Linux performance?

Mandrake 8.0 installed smoothly with no issues at all. It correctly
installed
drivers for the IDE controllers, the PCI bus, the AGP bus, and the USB.
Linux would not recognise the integrated AC97 sound system, which was no
surprise. The SIS site implies that the SIS735 has the same sound system as
the SIS730, but when I checked the Linux drivers for the 730, I found that
Sis had posted the wrong driver on their web site. They had put the link in
for the LAN driver instead of the audio driver, so I have been unable to try
it out. The RedHat hardware compatibility site suggests that an Intel i810
audio driver  'might' work with any AC97 sound system, but I have not tried
it. So we can wait for an eventual Sis driver, or else install a separate
sound card.

Harddrake reported two devices which it did not recognise. I assume these
were associated with the sound system since everything else works perfectly.

I installed the nvidia OpenGL drivers, and OpenGL works perfectly. (As
determined by tuxracer)

So now I have a beautifully fast shiny new Linux computer. The only problem
remaining for me is the Buffalo/Melco wireless LAN card which I cannot get
to
work under either Linux, or Windows ME (but it does work under Windows 98)
(I cannot imagine what possessed me to buy a copy of Windows ME. It is
'terrible')

This card is a right pig to install as I know from experience, and I am sure
it has nothing to do with the K7S5A. Melco are promising Linux drivers for
it
'some time this year'.



In conclusion if anyone is tempted by the K7S5A all I can say is, I am very
happy with it, but of course DYOR

Derek




Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com

Reply via email to