Ok well i just made a new comp but kept my old video card. Here are the specs 80 gig WD harddrive Gigabyte K8 TRiton GA-k8ns ultra 939 mobo 1 gig of cosair ram and my vid card is an asus radeon 9600xt 128 mb well i installed windows XP prof and everything was goin good until i started installing my video card drivers. At first i used the new catalyst 5.7 drivers but during installation, it said the inf file couldnt be installed. After it finished installing and i rebooted, it said my ati drivers could not be found. So i called up ati and they told me to download a patch called pnpreg and i used the command prompt to install it.
Ethernet Driver Sign in to follow this. Ethernet Driver. By tussin, March 28, 2009 in Networking, Email, and Internet Connections. Recommended Posts. Tussin tussin New Member. Gigabyte GA-K8VT800 K8 Triton Series AGP8X / DDR 400 Motherboard.
Gigabyte K8 Triton Driver For Mac Mac
But it says error 234 or something so im guessing it didnt work. But they also told me to manually install the drivers through device manager but everytime it is about to finish, it shuts down my comp.
Does anyone have any ideas b/c im out and im pissed that my new comp doesnt work off the bat.also i now have SP1 installed but i didnt have it installed before Edit: oh yea in device manager, the secondary radeon 9600 driver is installed properly, just not the other one.
Introduction VIA's K8T800 Pro and NVIDIA's nForce3 250 core logic have afforded the major mainboard makers an easy opportunity for tweaked or new products based on them. For many manufacturers it was simply a case of a couple of tweaks and a swap of the K8T800 core logic on an existing product, to create a K8T800 Pro design. On the other hand, with many manufacturers shunning nForce3 150, the first revision of NVIDIA's Athlon 64/FX/Opteron core ASIC, any nForce3 250 products were completely new designs.
However, Gigabyte are one such manufacturer that did take the nForce3 150 plunge, with the GA-K8NNXP, so their nForce3 250 product had an established base from which the new product was created. They argue that that's enabled them to create a best-of-breed nForce3 250 product to follow the K8NNXP, so when they asked if they could send over a sample of the K8NS Pro, a motherboard I'd first come into contact with back when nForce3 250 first launched, I was intrigued and could hardly say no. It's not quite a K8NNXP with just a bridge change, but it's close. So if you're familiar with that board there won't be too many surprises. So if you're looking to upgrade to, or invest in, the world of Socket 754 Athlon 64 or Sempron, the K8NS Pro might just be worth a look.