Computer videos, other items, and how to make something out of specific items. I don't always upload videos on here. But when I do, I upload 4 at a time and just want to watch the Internet go slow.
Tks for your offer in advance .Sir~~I have the same delco and this model delco can't hold the momery of radio when the power off. Does your delco have the same situation ? Awaiting to your soon feedback with many tks .
had someone else complain about this issue and solved it. The blower has lint or dryer sheets in it which causes vibration so you would need to take it apart and clean out the blower.
Does the adapter aliviate the need for SATA drivers? My install disc doesn't have any Service Packs so I'm hoping I can just pop a 128GB SSD onto an IDE to SATA adapter as opposed to slipstreaming drivers.
I have a similar AMS laptop, albeit slightly older without the sound card. I just went through a CMOS battery replacement. I'm curious if you have done that already or have done anything else with the machine. I am trying to get mine working better, but the screen is unusably bright unless you look at it from a sharp angle.
Hi, I own one of these... in the original packaging, with all the bundled software, etc. It's worth noting that the "driver cd" the guy shipped to you is the WRONG DRIVERS. He provided a "Voodoo 1" driver package, which is not really what you need. You need two different drivers, all of which were provided on the original Intergraph-supplied CD... one for the AT25 (2D solution) and one for the Voodoo Rush (3D solution). This was, in effect, two different video cards on a single printed circuit board. (Prior 3DFX cards were physically separate, and you ran the output from the main video card out to the back of that 3DFX card, and t hen from the 3DFX card to the monitor.) The card was produced by Intergraph, who at the time were the leading "engineering workstation" manufacturers. Them stepping into the "comsumer" market was a bit surprising. The I3DV was a weird card, but it really was the very first all-in-one 2D & 3D solution to hit the market. The ports on the rear of the card aren't what you think they care, either. It has the capability of outputing video by S-video or by RCA jack, as well as by conventional VGA (this due to many monitors of the time not having converged on the soon-to-be standard of VGA in D-sub format). But that lowermost port, which is sort of similar to the S-video? No, it's not for SOUND. That was for 3D shutter glasses. It didn't ship with them by default, but there were quite a few options, even at that point, for 3D glasses. And yes, even then, you could run Quake in true 3D, seeing every surface and creature in true 3D. (Some items in the game, like lamp halos, were 2D visual effects, so they looked a bit weird, though.) "Virtual reality" is one of those things that comes and goes... but that's mainly, as far as I can tell, so that every few years they can sell what ought to be "common" equipment for a lot more than it's really worth. These day, the HTC Vive and the Oculus Rift (and their offshoots) are where this is going, but 3D shutter glasses have been around for a LONG time, and work very well. (The last commercial version of this was the nVidia 3DVision, which was not really even a "new" concept, just yet another recycling of something that they used to offer for free!) I had 3D shutter glasses for my Intense 3D Voodoo. It was, at the time, a truly amazing thing. The card came with FOUR separate CDs. The first was the Intergraph driver CD, but it also came with three bundled games. It came with "Turok - Dinosaur Hunter," it came with "Jane's Longbow FX," and it came with "Moto Racer." The first was "tweaked" to work specifically on this card, but it was really only the standard version of "Turok" with the Direct3D driver and software raster rendering options removed. "Longbow FX" was a single-CD version of the two-CD "Jane's AH-64D Longbow" with some removed content, and the first-ever 3D-accelerated flight sim engine (which was later directly migrated into "Longbow Gold" and with minor tweaking into "Longbow 2"). Moto Racer was, on the other hand, a Direct3D game, and it was the most finnicky, as Direct3D was REALLY "weird" at that point. Quake was not provided, but the driver CD did include the Quake-optimized OpenGL driver and related files specifically for Quake. I ran my Rush for a long time, but eventually upgraded to the Diamond Monster Fusion, which was the SECOND 3DFX "2D+3D" card, after this one... and it was significantly more capable. After that, for a while, I ran combination of a 3DFX "Voodoo 2" 3D-only card and an early nVidia 2D+3D card. I eventually retired the Voodoo2 when GLide wrappers made it possible to run 3DFX-only games on Direct3D-only hardware. I still own the I3DV, boxed up, with all the original materials (including the driver and bundled software CDs, which I've imaged for long-term archiving). You don't need that driver CD, but if you don't h ave it, you'll need to find the proper Alliance ProMotion AT25 drivers, AND the 3DFX Voodoo Rush drivers (NOT "voodoo 1") AND the 3DFX "MiniGL" (the subset of OpenGL which Quake uses). You can still find them, but it takes a bit of digging these days. But the card itself was rock-solid. ************************************************ By the way... you can get the Alliance ProMotion AT25 drivers here: oemdrivers.com/graphics-alliance-promotion-at25 You can get "Rush" drivers here in either of these locations: oemdrivers.com/graphics-3dfx-voodoo-rush falconfly.3dfx.pl/rush.htm And you can get the MiniGL here: falconfly.3dfx.pl/minigl.htm There was quite a bit of paper shipped with the card, but these are the most important bits: www.manualslib.com/products/Intergraph-Intense-3d-Voodoo-2957291.html The games it came with? You can still get Moto Racer (tweaked only slightly to run on current hardware) on GOG.com. www.gog.com/en/game/moto_racer And there is a fairly significantly updated (but still, playwise, identical) version of Turok there as well: www.gog.com/en/game/turok As for "LongbowFX," since it's almost impossible to find these days, it's now on the "Internet archive" (you're welcome) archive.org/details/longbow-fx-cd-art And regarding the 3D glasses connector... here's a great place to start. www.stereo3d.com/vesa3.htm www.stereo3d.com/boards.htm ************************************************ Oh, and one last comment... the two on-board connector headers are not what you think they are, either. The upper one is a VMI connector... back then, DVD drives were just starting to show up on computers, and they required a separate hardware decoder, which could be connected to your video card by the VMI feature connector. This was the only way, at the time, to play back DVDs on a PC. The smaller connector is a VESA feature connector, and was used for different types of decoders and encoders.
To solve the issue in mine, after multiple attemps cleaning the contacs with isopropyl alcohol and rubber, I disconnected the battery, reflowed all chip pins carefully with a small tip iron and then gently with a flat screwdriver scraped some dust particles from pins and repeated isopropyl alcohol cleaning and rubber and isopropyl alcohol again. Worked like a charm.
Can you compared Quake please? I think the Pentium Overdrive would be quicker due to the much faster FPU, but I'd love to know the demo fps difference on same setup different CPUs