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2 Posts tagged with the intel tag
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Fired up all three monitors today, and as you can see--it's both impressive and takes a lot of space.

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Turns out, Flight Sim X doesn't like Vista 64 very much, or the ATI drivers, or something. I couldn't get it to run anywhere close to acceptably. We knew games might be an issue, which is why we decided on the dual-boot system. Alas, I haven't installed XP Pro SP2 yet, so the uber-impressive FSim surround cockpit I planned to show you ain't happenin' yet. ATI's control panel needs some work in the multi-display area--it's so confusing that I wound up using the Windows version, which had the added benefit of actually working! A quick nod to Alan Stafford for suggesting that.

This next picture is of the Addonics 2.5-inch to 3.5-inch adapter. It also includes a 40-pin to 44-pin cable adapter which I won't need since the SSDs are SATA. I plan to drill two more holes so I can mount both SSDs on one adapter, leaving space in the case for the Ultra card reader/USB/FireWire front panel box. The SSDs produce hardly any heat so thermals aren't an issue.

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I mentioned previously that I thought that the BIOS flash to the Adaptec 3405 might have been responsible for the D5400Xs BIOS freeze when I tried to change the boot order. Intel said I might be running out of option ROM space, what with two graphics cards, the Marvell eSata controller and the motherboard BIOS. I sure hope this is fixed/fixable on the shipping boards (this is an alpha) as I don't want to run the Iomega UltraMax Pro external drive off of USB. Not a fate worse than taxes mind you, but not optimal by any means. Intel's been very helpful in addressing these issues. Once upon a time, the company wasn't responsive in the least. Kudos to Dan and Colin.

Tomorrow it's back to plumbing the case. Thanks to Tiger Direct for getting all this stuff sent my way in a timely fashion.

Cheers, Jon

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I ragged a bit on the Gigabyte 3D Mercury case in my first post, calling it a near thing. Actually, the case isn't a near thing at all, it's the Skulltrail D5400 motherboard that's caused the most difficulty. Not that it isn't a wonderful product, it's just something new to the consumer market with special needs. A pampered rock star if you will.

First off, it's eATX, meaning large, with only relatively few cases on the market that will accommodate it. Next there's the fact that it's socket LGA771 meaning none of Intel's mainstream LGA775 processors fit it. There's no throwing two cheapos in this thing and upgrading later. Then there are those two darn EPS12V 8-pin sockets. If you've been reading, you'll already know that it was very difficult to find a power supply that offered two leads and I've yet to spot an adapter to split a single EPS12V connector into two. You might not want to do such a thing anyway, as a single 12-volt rail might not be up to the task (though I was perfectly willing to try it!).

The D5400XS I'm using at the moment is an alpha preproduction unit from Intel though I've been assured it's virtually identical to what will hit the retail channels. Even now that I've got everything in place, I'm still trying to figure out why it's so slow to boot. It takes forever to recognize the OCZ SSDs and I'm hoping there's not a compatibility issue. Oh, well... that's why they pay me the big bucks.

Caveat: The following is meant to be illustrative of the problems one can encounter when configuring and troubleshooting with new hardware and technologies. It is most emphatically NOT a rant against any particular company. I've encounter such issues with virtually every vendor in the industry at some point. Technology is programmed by humans who make mistakes. Perhaps not as many as I make, but...
I figured the slow drive recognition was a BIOS/SATA controller issue with the SSDs that might have been spotted and solved by now so I downloaded the 2/18/2008 BIOS update from the Intel site. Unfortunately, after burning the ISO file to CD, I booted and was greeted by a prompt saying "Missing parameter in config file". Go figure. What said parameter was and why it was missing, I'll probably never know. Suffice it to say that I was not pleased.

Tried the interminable boot again, and this time I got the proper boot prompt. If only I'd pressed the key within the required 15 seconds. One more interminable boot (The drive recognition sequence is what was taking forever--hanging at the two SSD drives. Things were very quick after this section) and then the updater hung yet again at the Linux -InitDisk. There were also messages about INT13 failures. I let it sit there for quite a while and worked on this blog entry, remembering that this is where the BIOS hangs. It was trying to find a partition on the SSDs ten minutes later when I finally decided to just pull the SSDs (which are eventually recognized) and try the reboot without them attached. Pretty darn quick this time and the BIOS flash transpired without incident. When this system actually kicks into gear, it's not playing games. Well, not yet anyway. ;-)

Alas, the BIOS flash didn't solve the problem so I'm going to have to quit till Monday when the OCZ and Intel folks are available for comment. Until then.

Cheers, Jon

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