"Licensed to Quill" <> wrote in
news:be9gt9$d7o$:
> The Presario 5000 I left on overnight suddenly died completely.
> Nothing on screen, LEDs on monitor show no computer even connected and
> nothing appears on boot-up, no BIOS check, no cursor, no Compaq ID:
> Nothing except a functioning on/off switch.
>
> I e-mailed Compaq who had no idea what even might have caused it (I
> initially thought it might be the monitor itself)
>
> But soon I traced the fault to something to do with the Nvidia board
> which came with the computer. I took the board out and plugged the
> monitor into the SVGA plug in the motherboard and suddenly the whole
> thing started working again.
>
> I would just upgrade or replace the Nvidia board but as a cross check,
> I tried putting an old Diamond Multimedia 6326AGP video card into it
> to see if it might be something to do with something like the video
> board controller and the boot up process now won't get past the BIOS
> check. It identifies the card immediately on boot up as a
> diamond multimedia and then the computer freezes completely with the
> cursor on the next line but I can't do anything with it. I would
> suspect that there is no proper video card driver, - but I cant see
> that the computer is even getting as far as attaching any driver to
> any video board.
>
> Is this the indicator of a disastrously bad Nvidia board or is it
> something on the motherboard which is stopping it recognising and
> doing anything with the identification of ANY video accelerator?
>
> L2Q
>
> Also I presume that the video 'card' on the motherboard has less
> functionality or memory than the Nvidia board which came with the
> computer: Does
> anyone know HOW MUCH? Compaq didn't know this either but said that so
> long as I don't use it for gaming (which I don't) it wouldn't make any
> difference??????????
>
>
>
My 5000 never had a Nvidia board, just the onboard video, and it's always
worked just fine. It won't run stuff like N64 or PlayStation emulators,
which is just as much a problem with too slow speed and too little memory
as the video.
I ran a hardware sniffer when I was trying to run Linux (another failure)
and it reported 5M of video memory.
All you'd need to get the Diamond card to work would be the proper driver.
However, I tried using an AGP video card and though it worked, my
Interner browsing was slowed down tremendously. I pulled the card and
everything went back to normal.
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