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Comments to date: 11. Page 1 of 1. Average Rating:
WilliamRoddy 11:17am on Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010 
Everything a touch-typist or anyone else looking for a more relaxing, tactile yet comfortable typing experience needs to have said experience.
Attila 10:59pm on Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010 
Inserted the disk in my Toshiba Portege and transferred my My Documents there as a new drive. I was then able to reformat my Toshiba C drive.
schubo 9:51pm on Friday, October 29th, 2010 
I use this in my Nikon D90. This card has a great transfer rate and storage Lightweight, Fast Transfer, Reliable Great Product! Especially for a Digital Camera! When using a HD Camcorder however I would recommend at least a 8GB Card. Fast Transfer, Durable Dock,...
decibeldriver 3:47am on Monday, October 25th, 2010 
Card stopped working mid use Upon the first use it, took approx 800 photos and downloaded then all without trouble. the second time. Epic Piece of Trash, Avoid at all Costs Where to begin: I bought two of these cards last summer to use with my Canon VIXIA HF200 camcorder.
Nehwyn 4:54pm on Wednesday, September 15th, 2010 
All I require from a data card is to work, have capacity that is stated. this card works with no problems Convenient Interface","Fast". Easy To Use","Great Value","Large Capacity","Reliable Performance","Writes/Reads fast None
wuddie 8:23am on Thursday, September 9th, 2010 
Worked perfectly straight out of the box and at half the price of local retailers. DID NOT WORK OUT OF THE BOX STICK TO SANDISK OR SOME OTHER RELIABLE COMPANY
ivan_kb 11:37pm on Sunday, July 18th, 2010 
Tried multiple attempts through various ways and while my old card worked fine in all similar circumstances this one had horrible transfer rates and c... Will contact cs and see if it can be replaced This card is fast, has lots of memory, and is very inexpensive Failed after 2 weeks of use.
meraman 4:11am on Sunday, June 13th, 2010 
Obviously the second drive is defective. NewEgg rep was fantastic in working with me and has completely satisfied my concerns!
prt3 10:07pm on Sunday, May 16th, 2010 
I am using this card for my Canon DSLR, works really better than my expectation. Easy To Use","Great Value","Reliable Performance".
sawoj 6:38am on Friday, April 2nd, 2010 
This worked perfectly for me to transfer pics from my cell phone to my computer....easy to use, inexpensive and as always fast shipping from Ostock item arrive ontime put it in my camera and it works just fine thanks overstock plan to order other one
mmoran27 11:34am on Thursday, March 18th, 2010 
As Easy As I Can Explain This! I have always used SD Cards (Secure Digital) for my cameras, so when I purchased the Panasonic HM-TA1 Video Camera. Why not include handy software programs on flash cards! For the Zoom H2, H4n, H1.

Comments posted on www.ps2netdrivers.net are solely the views and opinions of the people posting them and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of us.

 

Documents

doc0

CUSI-FX

Socket 370 FlexATX Motherboard

USERS MANUAL

USER'S NOTICE
No part of this manual, including the products and software described in it, may be reproduced, transmitted, transcribed, stored in a retrieval system, or translated into any language in any form or by any means, except documentation kept by the purchaser for backup purposes, without the express written permission of ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC. (ASUS). ASUS PROVIDES THIS MANUAL AS IS WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. IN NO EVENT SHALL ASUS, ITS DIRECTORS, OFFICERS, EMPLOYEES OR AGENTS BE LIABLE FOR ANY INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF PROFITS, LOSS OF BUSINESS, LOSS OF USE OR DATA, INTERRUPTION OF BUSINESS AND THE LIKE), EVEN IF ASUS HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES ARISING FROM ANY DEFECT OR ERROR IN THIS MANUAL OR PRODUCT. Product warranty or service will not be extended if: (1) the product is repaired, modified or altered, unless such repair, modification of alteration is authorized in writing by ASUS; or (2) the serial number of the product is defaced or missing. Products and corporate names appearing in this manual may or may not be registered trademarks or copyrights of their respective companies, and are used only for identification or explanation and to the owners benefit, without intent to infringe. SiS is a trademark of Silicon Integrated Corporation. Intel, Celeron, LANDesk, and Pentium are trademarks of Intel Corporation. IBM and OS/2 are registered trademarks of International Business Machines. Symbios is a registered trademark of Symbios Logic Corporation. Windows and MS-DOS are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. Adobe and Acrobat are registered trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated. The product name and revision number are both printed on the product itself. Manual revisions are released for each product design represented by the digit before and after the period of the manual revision number. Manual updates are represented by the third digit in the manual revision number. For previous or updated manuals, BIOS, drivers, or product release information, contact ASUS at http://www.asus.com.tw or through any of the means indicated on the following page. SPECIFICATIONS AND INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS MANUAL ARE FURNISHED FOR INFORMATIONAL USE ONLY, AND ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT ANY TIME WITHOUT NOTICE, AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSTRUED AS A COMMITMENT BY ASUS. ASUS ASSUMES NO RESPONSIBILITY OR LIABILITY FOR ANY ERRORS OR INACCURACIES THAT MAY APPEAR IN THIS MANUAL, INCLUDING THE PRODUCTS AND SOFTWARE DESCRIBED IN IT. Copyright 2001 ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC. All Rights Reserved.
Product Name: ASUS CUSI-FX Manual Revision: 1.03 E699 Release Date: January 2001
ASUS CUSI-FX Users Manual

ASUS CONTACT INFORMATION

ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC. (Asia-Pacific)

Marketing

Address: Telephone: Fax: Email: Tel (English): Tel (Chinese): Fax: Email: Newsgroup: WWW: FTP: 150 Li-Te Road, Peitou, Taipei, Taiwan 112 +886-2-2894-3447 +886-2-2894-3449 info@asus.com.tw +886-2-2894-3447 ext. 706 +886-2-2894-3447 ext. 111 +886-2-2895-9254 tsd@asus.com.tw news2.asus.com.tw www.asus.com.tw ftp.asus.com.tw/pub/ASUS

Location DIMM1 (Rows 0&1) DIMM2 (Rows 2&3) 168-pin DIMM SDRAM 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512MB SDRAM 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512MB Total System Memory (Max 1GB) x1 x1 = Total Memory
3. H/W SETUP System Memory

3.5.1 General DIMM Notes

This motherboard supports SPD (Serial Presence Detect) DIMMs. This is the memory of choice for best performance vs. stability. This motherboard does NOT support registered memory. SDRAM chips are generally thinner with higher pin density than EDO (Extended Data Output) chips. BIOS shows SDRAM memory on bootup screen. Single-sided DIMMs come in 16, 32, 64,128, 256MB; double-sided come in 32, 64, 128, 256, 512MB.
3.5.2 DIMM Memory Installation
Insert the module(s) as shown. Because the number of pins are different on either side of the breaks, the module will only fit in the orientation shown. DIMM modules are longer and have different pin contact on each side and therefore have a higher pin density. SIMM modules have the same pin contact on both sides.

88 Pins

60 Pins

20 Pins

CUSI-FX 168-Pin DIMM Sockets
The DIMMs must be 3.3V Unbuffered for this motherboard. To determine the DIMM type, check the notches on the DIMMs (see figure below).
168-Pin DIMM Notch Key Definitions (3.3V)
DRAM Key Position Unbuffered RFU Buffered
Voltage Key Position 5.0V 3.3V Reserved
The notches on the DIMM module will shift between left, center, or right to identify the type and also to prevent the wrong type from being inserted into the DIMM slot on the motherboard. You must ask your retailer the correct DIMM type before purchasing. This motherboard supports four clock signals.
3.6 Central Processing Unit (CPU)
The motherboard provides a ZIF Socket 370. The CPU that came with the motherboard should have a fan attached to it to prevent overheating. If this is not the case, then purchase a fan before you turn on your system. WARNING! Be sure that there is sufficient air circulation across the processors heatsink by regularly checking that your CPU fan is working. Without sufficient circulation, the processor could overheat and damage both the processor and the motherboard. You may install an auxiliary fan, if necessary. To install a CPU, first turn off your system and remove its cover. Locate the ZIF socket and open it by first pulling the lever sideways away from the socket then upwards to a 90-degree angle. Insert the CPU with the correct orientation as shown. The notched corner should point towards the end of the lever. Because the CPU has a corner pin for two of the four corners, the CPU will only fit in the orientation as shown. The picture is for reference only; you should have a CPU fan that covers the face of the CPU. With the added weight of the CPU fan, no force is required to insert the CPU. Once completely inserted, close the sockets lever while holding down the CPU. After the CPU is , install an Intel recommended fan heatsink. Locate the CPU fan connector (see 3.1 Motherboard Layout or 3.8 Connectors) and connect the CPU fan cable to it. NOTE: Do not forget to set the correct Bus Frequency and Multiple (frequency multiple setting is available only on unlocked processors) for your Socket 370 processor or else boot-up may not be possible. Socket 370 processors provide internal thermal sensing so that a socket mounted thermal resistor is not needed. CAUTION! Be careful not to scrape the motherboard when mounting a clampstyle processor fan or else damage may occur to the motherboard.

Socket 370 CPU (Top) Socket 370 CPU (Bottom)

3. H/W SETUP CPU

Celeron

CUSI-FX Socket 370

Gold Arrow

Pentium III

3.7 Expansion Cards
WARNING! Unplug your power supply when adding or removing expansion cards or other system components. Failure to do so may cause severe damage to both your motherboard and expansion cards.
3.7.1 Expansion Card Installation Procedure
1. Read the documentation for your expansion card and make any necessary hardware or software settings for your expansion card, such as jumpers. 2. Remove your computer systems cover and the bracket plate on the slot you intend to use. Keep the bracket for possible future use. 3. Carefully align the cards connectors and press firmly. 4. Secure the card on the slot with the screw you removed above. 5. Replace the computer systems cover. 6. Set up the BIOS if necessary (such as IRQ xx Used By ISA: Yes in PNP AND PCI SETUP) 7. Install the necessary software drivers for your expansion card.
3.7.2 Assigning IRQs for Expansion Cards
Some expansion cards need an IRQ to operate. Generally, an IRQ must be exclusively assigned to one use. In a standard design, there are 16 IRQs available but most of them are already in use, leaving 6 IRQs free for expansion cards. If your motherboard has PCI audio onboard, an additional IRQ will be used. If your motherboard also has MIDI enabled, another IRQ will be used, leaving 4 IRQs free.
3. H/W SETUP Expansion Cards
The following table lists the default IRQ assignments for standard PC devices. Use this table when configuring your system and for resolving IRQ conflicts.
Standard Interrupt Assignments
IRQ 2 3* 4* 5* 6 7* 8 9* 10* 11* 12* 13 14* 15* Priority N/A 10 Standard Function System Timer Keyboard Controller Programmable Interrupt Communications Port (COM2) Communications Port (COM1) Sound Card (sometimes LPT2) Floppy Disk Controller Printer Port (LPT1) System CMOS/Real Time Clock ACPI Mode when enabled IRQ Holder for PCI Steering IRQ Holder for PCI Steering PS/2 Compatible Mouse Port Numeric Data Processor Primary IDE Channel Secondary IDE Channel
*These IRQs are usually available for ISA or PCI devices.
Interrupt Request Table for this Motherboard
Interrupt requests are shared as shown by the following table: INT-A shared shared INT-B shared shared INT-C shared shared INT-D not shared

4) Universal Serial Bus Ports 0 & 1 (Black two 4-pin USB) Two USB ports are available for connecting USB devices.
Universal Serial Bus (USB)
5) Parallel Port Connector (Burgundy 25-pin PRINTER) You can enable the parallel port and choose the IRQ through Onboard Parallel Port (see 4.4.2 I/O Device Configuration). NOTE: Serial printers must be connected to the serial port.
Parallel (Printer) Port (25-pin female)

On Off Blinking

LED1 Power No power Data transfer
LED2 Good connection Bad connection
6) Serial Port Connectors (Teal/Turquoise 9-pin COM1) One serial port is ready for a mouse or other serial devices. A second serial port is available using a serial port bracket connected from the motherboard to an expansion slot opening. See Onboard Serial Port 1 in 4.2.2 I/O Device Configuration for settings.
COM 1 Serial Port (9-pin male)
CUSI-FX Serial Port Header
7) Monitor Output Connector (Blue 15-pin VGA1) This connector is for output to a VGA-compatible device.
VGA Monitor (15-pin female)
8) Game/MIDI Connector (Gold 15-pin GAME_AUDIO) (optional) You may connect game joysticks or game pads to this connector for playing games. Connect MIDI devices for playing or editing professional audio.
Game/MIDI (15-pin female)
Line Out Line In Mic 1/8" Stereo Audio Connectors
3. H/W SETUP DMA Channels Connectors
9) Audio Port Connectors (Three 1/8 GAME_AUDIO) (optional) Line Out (lime) can be connected to headphones or preferably powered speakers. Line In (light blue) allows tape players or other audio sources to be recorded by your computer or played through the Line Out (lime). Mic (pink) allows microphones to be connected for inputting voice.
10) Primary (Blue) / Secondary IDE Connectors (Two 40-1pin IDE) These connectors support the provided UltraDMA/66 IDE hard disk ribbon cable. Connect the cables blue connector to the motherboards primary (recommended) or secondary IDE connector, and then connect the gray connector to your UltraDMA/66 slave device (hard disk drive) and the black connector to your UltraDMA/66 master device. It is recommended that non-UltraDMA/66 devices be connected to the secondary IDE connector. If you install two hard disks, you must configure the second drive to Slave mode by setting its jumper accordingly. Please refer to your hard disk documentation for the jumper settings. BIOS now supports specific device bootup (see 4.4.1 Advanced CMOS Setup). (Pin 20 is removed to prevent inserting in the wrong orientation when using ribbon cables with pin 20 plugged). TIP: You may configure two hard disks to be both Masters with two ribbon cables one for the primary IDE connector and another for the secondary IDE connector. You may install one operating system on an IDE drive and another on a SCSI drive and select the boot disk through 4.4.1 Advanced CMOS Setup. IMPORTANT: UltraDMA/66 IDE devices must use a 40-pin 80-conductor IDE cable for 66MBytes/s transfer rates.

+12.0 Volts +5V Standby Power Good Ground +5.0 Volts Ground +5.0 Volts Ground +3.3 Volts +3.3 Volts
+5.0 Volts +5.0 Volts NC Ground Ground Ground Power Supply On Ground -12.0 Volts +3.3 Volts
CUSI-FX ATX Power Connector
28) Power Supply Thermal Sensor Connector (2-pin PWRTMP) If you have a power supply with thermal monitoring, connect its thermal sensor cable to this connector.
Power Supply Thermal Sensor
CUSI-FX Thermal Sensor Connector
3.9 Starting Up the First Time
1. After all connections are made, close the system case cover. 2. Be sure that all switches are off (in some systems, marked with ), and the power input voltage is set to comply with the standard used in your country (220V-240V or 110-120V). 3. Connect the power supply cord into the power supply located on the back of your system case according to your system users manual. 4. Connect the power cord into a power outlet that is equipped with a surge protector. 5. You may then turn on your devices in the following order: a. Your monitor b. External SCSI devices (starting with the last device on the chain) c. Your system power. For ATX power supplies, you need to switch on the power supply as well as press the ATX power switch on the front of the case. 6. The power LED on the front panel of the system case will light. For ATX power supplies, the system LED will light when the ATX power switch is pressed. The LED on the monitor may light up or switch between orange and green after the systems if it complies with green standards or if it has a power standby feature. The system will then run power-on tests. While the tests are running, the BIOS will alarm beeps or additional messages will appear on the screen. If you do not see anything within 30 seconds from the time you turn on the power, the system may have failed a power-on test. Recheck your jumper settings and connections or call your retailer for assistance.

Award BIOS Beep Codes

Beep One short beep when displaying logo Long beeps in an endless loop One long beep followed by three short beeps High frequency beeps when system is working Meaning No error during POST No DRAM installed or detected Video card not found or video card memory bad CPU overheated System running at a lower frequency

3. H/W SETUP Powering Up

7. During power-on, hold down <Delete> to enter BIOS setup. Follow the instructions in 4. BIOS SETUP. * Powering Off your computer: You must first exit or shut down your operating system before switching off the power switch. For ATX power supplies, you can press the ATX power switch after exiting or shutting down your operating system. If you use Windows 9X, click the Start button, click Shut Down, and then click Shut down the computer? The power supply should turn off after Windows shuts down. NOTE: The message You can now safely turn off your computer will not appear when shutting down with ATX power supplies.

40 ASUS CUSI-FX Users Manual

4. BIOS SETUP

4.1 Managing and Updating Your BIOS
4.1.1 Upon First Use of the Computer System
It is recommended that you save a copy of the original motherboard BIOS along with a Flash Memory Writer utility (AFLASH.EXE) to a bootable floppy disk in case you need to reinstall the BIOS later. AFLASH.EXE is a Flash Memory Writer utility that updates the BIOS by uploading a new BIOS file to the programmable flash ROM on the motherboard. This file works only in DOS mode. To determine the BIOS version of your motherboard, check the last four numbers of the code displayed on the upper left-hand corner of your screen during bootup. Larger numbers represent a newer BIOS file. 1. Type FORMAT A:/S at the DOS prompt to create a bootable system floppy disk. DO NOT copy AUTOEXEC.BAT & CONFIG.SYS to the disk. 2. Type COPY D:\AFLASH\AFLASH.EXE A:\ (assuming D is your CDROM drive) to copy AFLASH.EXE to the just created boot disk. NOTE: AFLASH works only in DOS mode. It will not work with DOS prompt in Windows and will not work with certain memory drivers that may be loaded when you boot from your hard drive. It is recommended that you reboot using a floppy. 3. Reboot your computer from the floppy disk. NOTE: BIOS setup must specify Floppy as the first item in the boot sequence. 4. In DOS mode, type A:\AFLASH <Enter> to run AFLASH.
IMPORTANT! If unknown is displayed after Flash Memory:, the memory chip is either not programmable or is not supported by the ACPI BIOS and therefore, cannot be programmed by the Flash Memory Writer utility.
4. BIOS SETUP Updating BIOS
5. Select 1. Save Current BIOS to File from the Main menu and press <Enter>. The Save Current BIOS To File screen appears.
6. Type a filename and the path, for example, A:\XXX-XX.XXX and then press <Enter>.
4.1.2 Updating BIOS Procedures
WARNING! Only update your BIOS if you have problems with your motherboard and you know that the new BIOS revision will solve your problems. Careless updating can result in your motherboard having more problems! 1. Download an updated ASUS BIOS file from the Internet (WWW or FTP) (see ASUS CONTACT INFORMATION on page 3 for details) and save to the disk you created earlier. 2. Boot from the disk you created earlier. 3. At the A:\ prompt, type AFLASH and then press <Enter>. 4. At the Main Menu, type 2 and then press <Enter>. The Update BIOS Including Boot Block and ESCD screen appears. 5. Type the filename of your new BIOS and the path, for example, A:\XXXXX.XXX, and then press <Enter>. NOTE: To cancel this operation, press <Enter>.

6. When prompted to confirm the BIOS update, press Y to start the update.
7. The utility starts to program the new BIOS information into the flash ROM. The boot block will be updated automatically only when necessary. This will minimize the chance that a failed update will prevent your system from booting up. When the programming is finished, Flashed Successfully will be displayed.
8. Follow the onscreen instructions to continue.
WARNING! If you encounter problems while updating the new BIOS, DO NOT turn off your system since this might prevent your system from booting up. Just repeat the process, and if the problem still persists, update the original BIOS file you saved to disk above. If the Flash Memory Writer utility was not able to successfully update a complete BIOS file, your system may not be able to boot up. If this happens, your system will need servicing.
44 ASUS CUSI-FX Users Manual

4.2 BIOS Setup Program

This motherboard supports a programmable EEPROM that can be updated using the provided utility as described in 4.1 Managing and Updating Your BIOS. The utility is used if you are installing a motherboard, reconfiguring your system, or prompted to Run Setup. This section describes how to configure your system using this utility. Even if you are not prompted to use the Setup program, at some time in the future you may want to change the configuration of your computer. For example, you may want to enable the Security Password Feature or make changes to the power management settings. It will then be necessary to reconfigure your system using the BIOS Setup program so that the computer can recognize these changes and record them in the CMOS RAM of the EEPROM. The EEPROM on the motherboard stores the Setup utility. When you start up the computer, the system provides you with the opportunity to run this program. This appears during the Power-On Self Test (POST). Press <Delete> to call up the Setup utility. If you are a little bit late in pressing the mentioned key, POST will continue with its test routines, thus preventing you from calling up Setup. If you still need to call Setup, restart the system by pressing <Ctrl> + <Alt> + <Delete>, or by pressing the Reset button on the system chassis. You can also restart by turning the system off and then back on again. But do so only if the first two methods fail. The Setup program has been designed to make it as easy to use as possible. It is a menu-driven program, which means you can scroll through the various sub-menus and make your selections among the predetermined choices. To access the BIOS Setup program, press the <Delete> key after the computer has run through its POST. NOTE: Because the BIOS software is constantly being updated, the following BIOS screens and descriptions are for reference purposes only and may not reflect your BIOS screens exactly.

4. BIOS SETUP Program Information

4.2.1 BIOS Menu Bar

The top of the screen has a menu bar with the following selections: MAIN Use this menu to make changes to the basic system configuration. ADVANCED Use this menu to enable and make changes to the advanced features. POWER Use this menu to configure and enable Power Management features. BOOT Use this menu to configure the default system device used to locate and load the Operating System. EXIT Use this menu to exit the current menu or specify how to exit the Setup program. To access the menu bar items, press the right or left arrow key on the keyboard until the desired item is highlighted.

4.2.2 Legend Bar

At the bottom of the Setup screen you will notice a legend bar. The keys in the legend bar allow you to navigate through the various setup menus. The following table lists the keys found in the legend bar with their corresponding alternates and functions. Navigation Key(s)
<F1> or <Alt + H> <Esc> or (keypad arrow) or (keypad arrow) - (minus key) + (plus key) or spacebar <Enter> <Home> or <PgUp> <End> or <PgDn> <F5> <F10>
4. BIOS SETUP Menu Introduction

Function Description

Displays the General Help screen from anywhere in the BIOS Setup Jumps to the Exit menu or returns to the main menu from a submenu Selects the menu item to the left or right Moves the highlight up or down between fields Scrolls backward through the values for the highlighted field Scrolls forward through the values for the highlighted field Brings up a selection menu for the highlighted field Moves the cursor to the first field Moves the cursor to the last field Resets the current screen to its Setup Defaults Saves changes and exits Setup

General Help

In addition to the Item Specific Help window, the BIOS setup program also provides a General Help screen. This screen can be called up from any menu by simply pressing <F1> or the <Alt> + <H> combination. The General Help screen lists the legend keys with their corresponding alternates and functions.
Saving Changes and Exiting the Setup Program
See 4.7 Exit Menu for detailed information on saving changes and exiting the setup program.

4. BIOS SETUP Main Menu

4.3.1 Primary & Secondary Master/Slave
Type [Auto] Select [Auto] to automatically detect an IDE hard disk drive. If automatic detection is successful, the correct values will be filled in for the remaining fields on this sub-menu. If automatic detection fails, your hard disk drive may be too old or too new. You can try updating your BIOS or enter the IDE hard disk drive parameters manually. NOTE: After the IDE hard disk drive information has been entered into BIOS, new IDE hard disk drives must be partitioned (such as with FDISK) and then formatted before data can be read from and write on. Primary IDE hard disk drives must have its partition set to active (also possible with FDISK). Other options for the Type field are: [None] - to disable IDE devices
4. BIOS SETUP Master/Slave Drives
NOTE: Before attempting to configure a hard disk drive, make sure you have the configuration information supplied by the manufacturer of the drive. Incorrect settings may cause your system to not recognize the installed hard disk. To allow the BIOS to detect the drive type automatically, select [Auto].
IMPORTANT: If your hard disk was already formatted on an older previous system, incorrect parameters may be detected. You will need to enter the correct parameters manually or use low-level format if you do not need the data stored on the hard disk. If the parameters listed differ from the ones used when the disk was formatted, the disk will not be readable. If the auto-detected parameters do not match the ones that should be used for your disk, you should enter the correct ones manually by setting [User Type HDD]. [User Type HDD]
Manually enter the number of cylinders, heads and sectors per track for your drive. Refer to your drive documentation or look on the drive for this information. If no drive is installed or if you are removing a drive and not replacing it, select [None]. Translation Method [LBA] Select the hard disk drive type in this field. When Logical Block Addressing is enabled, 28-bit addressing of the hard drive is used without regard for cylinders, heads, or sectors. Note that LBA Mode is necessary for drives with greater than 504MB in storage capacity. Configuration options: [LBA] [LARGE] [Normal] [Match Partition Table] [Manual] Cylinders This field configures the number of cylinders. Refer to your drive documentation to determine the correct value to enter into this field. NOTE: To make changes to this field, the Type field must be set to [User Type HDD] and the Translation Method field must be set to [Manual]. ASUS CUSI-FX Users Manual
Head This field configures the number of read/write heads. Refer to your drive documentation to determine the correct value to enter into this field. NOTE: To make changes to this field, the Type field must be set to [User Type HDD] and the Translation Method field must be set to [Manual]. Sector This field configures the number of sectors per track. Refer to your drive documentation to determine the correct value to enter into this field. NOTE: To make changes to this field, the Type field must be set to [User Type HDD] and the Translation Method field must be set to [Manual]. CHS Capacity This field shows the drives maximum CHS capacity calculated automatically by the BIOS from the drive information you entered. Maximum LBA Capacity This field shows the drives maximum LBA capacity calculated automatically by the BIOS from the drive information you entered. Multi-Sector Transfers [Maximum] This option automatically sets the number of sectors per block to the highest number supported by the drive. This field can also be configured manually. Note that when this field is automatically configured, the set value may not always be the fastest value for the drive. Refer to the documentation that came with your hard drive to determine the optimal value and set it manually. NOTE: To make changes to this field, the Type field must be set to [User Type HDD]. Configuration options: [Disabled] [2 Sectors] [4 Sectors] [8 Sectors] [16 Sectors] [32 Sectors] [Maximum] SMART Monitoring [Disabled] This allows the enabling or disabling of the S.M.A.R.T. (Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) system which utilizes internal hard disk drive monitoring technology. This feature is normally disabled because system resources used in this feature may decrease system performance. Configuration options: [Disabled] [Enabled] PIO Mode [4] This option lets you set a PIO (Programmed Input/Output) mode for the IDE device. Modes 0 through 4 provide successively increased performance. Configuration options: [0] [1] [2] [3] [4] Ultra DMA Mode [Disabled] Ultra DMA capability allows improved transfer speeds and data integrity for compatible IDE devices. Set to [Disabled] to suppress Ultra DMA capability. NOTE: To make changes to this field, the Type field must be set to [User Type HDD]. Configuration options: [0] [1] [2] [3] [4] [Disabled]

Forgot the Password? If you forgot the password, you can clear the password by erasing the CMOS Real Time Clock (RTC) RAM. The RAM data containing the password information is powered by the onboard button cell battery. To erase the RTC RAM: (1) Unplug your computer, (2) Short the solder points, (3) Turn ON your computer, (4) Hold down <Delete> during bootup and enter BIOS setup to re-enter user preferences.
Short solder points to Clear CMOS
CUSI-FX Clear RTC RAM Setting
Halt On [All Errors] This field determines which types of errors will cause the system to halt. Configuration options: [All Errors] [No Error] [All but Keyboard] [All but Disk] [All but Disk/Keyboard] Installed Memory [XXX MB] This display-only field displays the amount of conventional memory detected by the system during bootup. You do not need to make changes to this field.

4.4 Advanced Menu

Current CPU Internal Frequency This field displays the internal frequency of your processor. CPU Internal Frequency (When Jumper Free Mode is set to [Enabled]) In JumperFree Mode, this field allows you to select the internal frequency of your CPU. Select [Manual] if you want to make changes to the subsequent 2 fields. Note that selecting a frequency higher than the CPU manufacturer recommends may cause the system to hang or crash. See System Hangup on page 54. CPU Frequency Multiple This field sets the frequency multiple between the CPUs internal frequency and external frequency. In JumperFree Mode, when CPU Internal Frequency is set to [Manual], this must be set in conjunction with FSB/SDRAM Freq. (MHz) to match the internal frequency of your CPU. Configuration options vary according to the external frequency of your CPU. FSB/SDRAM Freq. (MHz) (When Jumper Free Mode is set to [Enabled]) This field determines whether the memory clock frequency is set to be in synchronous or asynchronous mode with respect to the Front Side Bus (FSB) frequency. CPU Level 1 Cache, CPU Level 2 Cache [Enabled] These fields allow you to choose from the default of [Enabled] or choose [Disabled] to turn on or off the CPUs Level 1 and Level 2 built-in cache. Configuration options: [Disabled] [Enabled]
4. BIOS SETUP Advanced Menu
CPU Level 2 Cache ECC Check [Disabled] This function controls the ECC capability in the CPU level 2 cache. Configuration options: [Disabled] [Enabled] Processor Serial Number [Disabled] The Processor Serial Number is a unique number that is added to every Pentium III processor to help verify the identity of the user across the Internet. Set this field to [Enabled] when you need increased security for doing business online or e-commerce. Otherwise, leave it to its default setting of [Disabled] for greater anonymity when surfing the Internet. NOTE: This field is available only when a Pentium III processor is installed in your system. BIOS Update [Enabled] This functions as an update loader integrated into the BIOS to supply the processor with the required data. In the default position of [Enabled], the BIOS will load the update on all processors during system bootup. Configuration options: [Disabled] [Enabled] PS/2 Mouse Function Control [Auto] The default of [Auto] allows the system to detect a PS/2 mouse on startup. If detected, IRQ12 will be used for the PS/2 mouse. IRQ12 will be reserved for expansion cards only if a PS/2 mouse is not detected. [Enabled] will always reserve IRQ12, whether on startup a PS/2 mouse is detected or not. Configuration options: [Enabled] [Auto] USB Legacy Support [Auto] This motherboard supports Universal Serial Bus (USB) devices. The default of [Auto] allows the system to detect a USB device on startup. If detected, USB controller legacy mode will be enabled. If not detected, USB controller legacy mode will be disabled. When this field is set to [Disabled], USB controller legacy mode is disabled no matter whether you are using a USB device or not. Configuration options: [Disabled] [Enabled] [Auto] OS/2 Onboard Memory > 64M [Disabled] When using OS/2 operating systems with installed DRAM of greater than 64MB, you need to set this option to [Enabled]; otherwise, leave this on [Disabled]. Configuration options: [Disabled] [Enabled]

Power Management [User Define] This option must be enabled to use any of the automatic power saving features. If this menu item is set to [Disabled], power management features will not function regardless of other field settings on this menu. The [User Define] option allows you to make your own selections in the Power menu. When set to [Max Saving], system power will be conserved to its greatest amount. The Suspend Mode field will then be set to predefined value that ensures maximum power savings.
Video Off Option [Suspend -> Off ] This field determines when to activate the video off feature for monitor power management. Configuration options: [Always On] [Suspend -> Off] Video Off Method [DPMS OFF] This field defines the video off features. The DPMS (Display Power Management System) feature allows the BIOS to control the video display card if it supports the DPMS feature. [Blank Screen] only blanks the screen (use this for monitors without power management or green features. If set up in your system, your screen saver will not display with [Blank Screen] selected). [V/ H SYNC+Blank] blanks the screen and turns off vertical and horizontal scanning. Configuration options: [Blank Screen] [V/H SYNC+Blank] [DPMS Standby] [DPMS Suspend] [DPMS OFF] [DPMS Reduce ON] HDD Power Down [Disabled] Shuts down any IDE hard disk drives in the system after a period of inactivity as set in this user-configurable field. This feature does not affect SCSI hard drives. Configuration options: [Disabled] [1 Min] [2 Min] [3 Min].[15 Min] Suspend Mode [Disabled] Sets the time period before the system goes into suspend mode. NOTE: This field is effective for DOS, Windows 9x, and Windows NT 4.0 environments. Configuration options: [Disabled] [1~2 Min] [2~3 Min].[1 Hour] PWR Button < 4 Secs [Soft Off] When set to [Soft off], the ATX switch can be used as a normal system power-off button when pressed for less than 4 seconds. [Suspend] allows the button to have a dual function where pressing less than 4 seconds will place the system in sleep mode. Regardless of the setting, holding the ATX switch for more than 4 seconds will power off the system. Configuration options: [Soft off] [Suspend]

4.5.1 Power Up Control

PWR Up On External Modem Act [Disabled] This allows either settings of [Enabled] or [Disabled] for powering up the computer when the external modem receives a call while the computer is in Soft-off mode. NOTE: The computer cannot receive or transmit data until the computer and applications are fully running. Thus connection cannot be made on the first try. Turning an external modem off and then back on while the computer is off causes an initialization string that will also cause the system to power on. Configuration options: [Disabled] [Enabled] Wake On LAN or PCI Modem[Disabled] Wake-On-LAN/PCI Modem allows your computer to be booted from another computer via a network by sending a wake-up frame or signal. Configuration options: [Disabled] [Enabled] IMPORTANT: This feature requires an optional network interface card with WakeOn-LAN and an ATX power supply with at least 720mA +5V standby power.

5.2 Start Windows

When you start Windows 98 for the first time after installing your motherboard, Windows will detect all plug-and play devices. Follow the Add New Hardware Wizard to install all necessary device drivers. When prompted to restart, select No and then follow the setup procedures in this section. NOTE: Because there are various motherboard settings, options, and expansion cards, the following can only be used as a general reference and may not be an exact reflection of your system.
5.3 CUSI-FX Motherboard Support CD
NOTE: The support CD contents are subject to change at any time without notice. To begin using your support CD disc, just insert it into your CD-ROM drive and the support CD installation menu should appear. If the menu does not appear, doubleclick or run E:\ASSETUP.EXE (assuming that your CD-ROM drive is drive E:).

5.3.1 Installation Menu

Display Driver: Installs SiS display drivers. C-Media Audio Driver and Application (on audio model only): Installs the driver for the onboard PCI audio chipset. Lan Driver (on LAN model only): Installs the driver for the onboard LAN controler. NOTE: If you do not see this item, set Onboard LAN to Enabled in BIOS setup (see 4.4.1 Chip Configuration). ASUS PC Probe Vx.xx: Installs a utility to monitor your computers fan, temperature, and voltages.

5. S/W SETUP Windows 98

Install ASUS Update Vx.xx: Installs a program to help you update your BIOS or download a BIOS image file. PC-cillin 2000 Vx.xx: Installs the PC-cillin virus protection software. View the online help for more information. Adobe Acrobat Reader Vx.x: Installs the Adobe Acrobat Reader software necessary to view users manuals saved in PDF format. Updated or other language versions of this motherboard's manual is available in PDF format at any of our web sites. Cyberlink Video and Audio Applications: Installs Cyberlink PowerPlayer SE, PowerDVD Trial, and Cyberlink VideoLive Mail. Show Motherboard Information: Allows you to view information about your motherboard, such as product name, BIOS version, and CPU.
(TO SEE THE FOLLOWING ITEMS, CLICK RIGHT ARROW ON THE LOWERRIGHT CORNER OF THE MAIN MENU) Browse Support CD: Allows you to view the contents of the CD. ReadMe: Allows you to view the support CD file list and contact information. Exit: Exits the CD installation menu. (TO RETURN TO THE MAIN MENU, CLICK LEFT ARROW ON THE LOWERRIGHT CORNER OF THE SECONDARY MENU)

LPT Port (Line Printer Port) Logical device name reserved by DOS for the computer parallel ports. Each LPT port is configured to use a different IRQ and address assignment. MMX A set of 57 new instructions based on a technique called Single Instruction, Multiple Data (SIMD), which is built into the new Intel Pentium PP/MT (P55C) and Pentium II (Klamath) CPU as well as other x86-compatible microprocessors. The MMX instructions are designed to accelerate multimedia and communications applications, such as 3D video, 3D sound, video conference. OnNow The OnNow design initiative is a comprehensive, system-wide approach to system and device power control. OnNow is a term for PC that is always ON but appears OFF and responds immediately to user or other requests. The OnNow design initiative involves changes that will occur in the Microsoft Windows operating system, device drivers, hardware, and applications, and also relies on the changes defined in the Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) specification. PC100 SDRAM is Intel's goal is to ensure that memory subsystems continue to support evolving platform requirements and to assure that memory does not become a bottleneck to system performance. It is especially important to ensure that the PC memory roadmap evolves together with the performance roadmaps for the processors, I/O and graphics. PCI Bus (Peripheral Component Interconnect Local Bus) PCI bus is a specification that defines a 32-bit data bus interface. PCI is a standard widely used by expansion card manufacturers. PCI Bus Master The PCI Bus Master can perform data transfer without local CPU help and furthermore, the CPU can be treated as one of the Bus Masters. PCI 2.1 supports concurrent PCI operation to allow the local CPU and bus master to work simultaneously. Plug and Play BIOS The ISA bus architecture requires the allocation of memory and I/O address, DMA channels and interrupt levels among multiple ISA cards. However, configuration of ISA cards is typically done with jumpers that change the decode maps for memory and I/O space and steer the DMA and interrupt signals to different pins on the bus. Further, system configuration files may need to be updated to reflect these changes. Users typically resolve sharing conflicts by referring to documentation provided by each manufacturer. For the average user, this configuration process can be unreliable and frustrating. Plug and play (PnP) BIOS eliminates the ISA add-on card hardware conflict problem. The PnP BIOS uses a memory block to define and remember each card's configuration, which allows the user to change the card's IRQs and DMA in BIOS either automatically or manually. POST (Power On Self Test) When you turn ON the computer, it will first run through the POST, a series of software-controlled diagnostic tests. The POST checks system memory, the motherboard circuitry, the display, the keyboard, the diskette drive, and other I/O devices. PS/2 Port PS/2 ports are based on IBM Micro Channel Architecture. This type of architecture transfers data through a 16-bit or 32-bit bus. A PS/2 mouse and/or keyboard may be used on ATX motherboards. RDRAM (Rambus DRAM) Developed by Rambus, Inc., this type of memory can deliver up to 1.6GB of data per second. RDRAM is the first interface standard that can be directly implemented on high performance VLSI components such as, CMOS DRAMs, memory controllers, and graphics/video ICs. ASUS CUSI-FX Users Manual 93

doc1

Injet Printers PartNumber PR-EPI-C203011B PR-EPI-C380001 PR-EPI-C379001 PR-EPI-C383001 PR-EPI-C383111 PR-EPI-C378001 PR-EPI-C380111 PR-LXI-43J8001 PR-LXI-17E0007 PR-LXI-17F0007 PR-LXI-11P0007 PR-LXI-14V0007 PR-LXI-13N0000
Description EPSON PRINTER STYLUS 3000,7PPM, 1440DPI W/STYLUSRIP FOR MAC/ EPSON SC 980 $50 MAIL-IN R/B, VALID UNTIL 07/31/01 EPSON STYLUS COLOR 580, 1440X720DPI/7PICO/6PPM/USBONLY EPSON STYLUS COLOR 777, 2880X720DPI/4PICO/8PPM/USB/PAR EPSON STYLUS COLOR 777I, 2880X720DPI/4PICO/8PPM/USB/PAR EPSON STYLUS COLOR 880, 2880X720/4PICO/12PPM/USB/PAR EPSON STYLUS COLOR 980N, 2880X720/4PICO/13PPM/USB/PAR LEXMARK OPTRA CLR 45, 12X22, 8PPM,8MB,1200DPI LEXMARK Z12 CLR JETPRNTR, 6PPM, 1200X1200 DPI LEXMARK Z32 CLR INKJET 7.5PPM, 3.5PPM CLR 1200X1200 DPI LEXMARK Z42 CLR JETPRNTR,10PPM, 2400X1200 DPI LEXMARK Z52 CLR INKJET 15PPM, 7PPM CLR 2400X1200 DPI LEXMARK Z82 CLR INKJET 3 IN 1, SCAN/PRINT/COPY 1200X1200 DPI
Price $1,956.00 $399.00 $109.00 $159.00 $159.00 $241.00 $698.00 $951.00 $78.00 $106.00 $158.00 $242.00 $319.00
Laser PartNumber PR-LXL-53A3271 PR-LXL-10E0074 PR-LXL-20T1001 PR-LXL-20T3201 PR-LXL-20T3241 PR-LXL-12L0113 PR-SSL-ML-4600 PR-SSL-ML-6040
Description LEXMARK M410TN (W/ 500 SHEET), 12PPM, 1200DPI, PAR, USB LEXMARK OPTRA C710DN 16PPM, 32MB 1200 (NETWORK& DUPLEX) LEXMARK OPTRA T610 15PPM, 4MB, 1200DPI, PARALLEL LEXMARK OPTRA T614 25PPM, 8MB, 1200DPI, PAR (REPL.20T3001) LEXMARK OPTRA T614NL 25PPM16MB, 1200DPI, PAR (LIGHT) LEXMARK OPTRA W810DN 35PPM 32M, 1200, PAR, 10/100 SAMSUNG ML-4600 LASER 8PPM,, 4MB, IBM-MAC, PAR/USB, 1200DPI SAMSUNG ML-6040 LASER, 12PPM, 4MB, GDI, PAR, 1200DPI
Price $1,593.00 $5,266.00 $1,597.00 $1,850.00 $2,382.00 $4,892.00 $348.00 $456.00
file:///D|/Documents and Settings/User.ULTRA/Desktop/Printers.htm [4/11/2001 3:53:23 PM]
Scanners PartNumber IP-AC-1220ST IP-AC-2720S IP-AC-1240UT IP-AC-S2W 3300U IP-AC-S2W 4300U IP-EP-B104211 IP-EP-B813142 IP-EP-B124081 IP-EP-B124011 IP-EP-B126021 IP-EP-B125011
Description ACER SCANPREMIO 1220ST EOL!, 1200X2400DPI 36BIT LEGAL ACER SCANWIT 2720S, 2700X2700DPI OPTICAL FILM SCAN ACERSCAN 1200X1200 48-BIT, USB/TRANSPARENCY ACERSCAN S2W 3300U 600X1200DPI, 48 BIT CCD USB 8.5iX11i ACERSCAN S2W 4300U 600X1200DPI, PUSH BUTTON/USB/48-BIT/8.5X1 EPSON 1200U PHOTO EOL!, 1200X2400DPI 35MM/NEGATIVES EPSON AUTO DOCUMENT FEEDER, (FOR THE PERFECTION 636/636U) EPSON PERFECTION 1240U PHOTO, 1200X2400DPI, 42BIT, USB EPSON PERFECTION 1240U, 1200X2400DPI, 42BIT, USB EPSON PERFECTION 1640SU, 1600X3200DPI, 42BIT, USB EPSON PERFECTION 640U, 600X2400DPI, 36-BIT, 3 BUTTON

Price $980.00 $593.00 $223.00 $115.00 $118.00 $414.00 $309.00 $415.00 $304.00 $442.00 $229.00
file:///D|/Documents and Settings/User.ULTRA/Desktop/New Folder/Scanners.htm [4/11/2001 8:51:24 PM]
Sound Cards PartNumber MM-CR-CT4815SI MM-CR-CT4832SI MM-CR-MP3+5.1 MM-CR-PLATINUM5.1 MM-CR-X-GAMER5.1 MM-WT-CM18738
Description CREATIVE SB16 PCI W/128 VOICE CREATIVE SB LIVE VALUE (W/CD, & MANUAL) CREATIVE SB LIVE! MP3+5.1, (RETAIL) CREATIVE SB LIVE! PLATINUM.1, (RETAIL) CREATIVE SB LIVE!X-GAMER5.1, (RETAIL) WISETECH CMEDIA CM18738 SB16, PCI 4-CHANNELS SOUND CARD
Price $33.00 $77.00 $154.00 $313.00 $154.00 $18.00
Speakers PartNumber MM-AL-ACS21W MM-AL-ATP3 MM-AL-ATP3W/O MM-AL-ATP5 MM-AL-ACS33/O MM-AL-ACS33 MM-AL-ACS95W/O MM-AL-ACS48W/O MM-AL-ACS45-2/O MM-AL-ACS45-2 MM-AL-ACS54W/O MM-AL-ACS54 MM-AL-ACS56 MM-AL-ACS56W/O MM-AL-ACS22 MM-KO-HDM225 MM-KO-HD/10B MM-KO-HDM/11 MM-KO-SW1 MM-KO-HD40 MM-KO-HD50AC MM-KO-SB10 MM-KO-M20 MM-KO-COM10 MM-KO-HDM325 MM-KO-SW110 MM-KO-HDM111 MM-KO-HDM235 MM-KO-SXM235 MM-KO-PORTAPRO MM-KO-HD33 MM-KO-SW100 MM-KO-SW300 MM-YA-YST-MS201/O MM-YA-YST-MS201
Description ALTEC 2 PC TOWER SPKR SYSTEM, WHITE BOX-FOR SI ONLY ALTEC 3PC SLIM PROFILE (BLACK), DESIGN (BLACK) ALTEC 3PC SLIM PROFILE (WHITE), (FOR SI ONLY) ALTEC 5PC 35W(4CH)+45W SUB BLK, SLIM PROFILE (RETAIL VERSION ALTEC ACS33 3PC 2X5W+15W SUB, FOR SYSTEM INTEGRATION ONLY ALTEC ACS33 3PC 2X5W+15W SUB, SPEAKER ALTEC POWERCUBE 2 X 5WATTS SPK, RMS-FOR SI ONLY ALTEC POWERCUBE 2X20W+40W SUB, 3-PC SPEAKER (FOR SI ONLY) ALTEC POWERCUBE 3PC SPEAKER, 20W WOODEN SUB (FOR SI ONLY) ALTEC POWERCUBE 3PC SPEAKER, 20W WOODEN SUBWOOFER (RETAIL) ALTEC POWERPLAY 5PC SPK(BLACK), 20W(4CH)+20W SUB (FOR SI ONL ALTEC POWERPLAY 5PC SPK(BLACK), 20W(4CH)+20W SUB FOR GAMERS ALTEC POWERPLAY 5PC SPK(BLACK), 35W(4CH)+35W SUB FOR GAMERS ALTEC POWERPLAY 5PC SPK(BLACK), 35W(4CH)+35W SUB FOR SI ONLY ALTEC SPK 2-PIECES 5W RMS, W/ 3 SATELLITE DRIVERS KOSS 14WATT MULTIMEDIA SPEAKER, W/HEADPHONE JACK KOSS 2X1.5W SPK W/O AC ADAPTER KOSS 2X2W STEREO W/O ADAPTER KOSS DUAL 4i WOOFERS W/ AMPLIF, BUILT IN 20 WATTS KOSS HD40 NON-AMP SPEAKER KOSS HD50 WITH AC ADAPTER KOSS HEADPHONE/MIC COMBO KOSS MIC DESK STYLE KOSS SPEAKER HANGER KOSS SPK 18W/CHANNEL AMPLIFIED, W/ 3D SOUND KOSS SPK 25WATTS 3-PIECE, SUBWOOFER W/ SATELLITE SPKRS KOSS SPK 4W AMPLIFIED, INCLUDES AC ADAPTOR KOSS SPK 5W/CHANNEL STEREO KOSS SPK HDM235 IN BLACK, 5W PER CHANNEL STEREO KOSS STEREOPHONE PORTA PRO KOSS STEREOPHONES (LIGHT WT), (WHITE) KOSS SUBWOOFER 15 WATTS, 240W PMPO USED IN SW110 KOSS SW300 3PC AMPLIFIED, MULTIMEDIA SUBWOOFER SYSTEM YAMAHA 3PC 2X6W+18W SUBWOOFER, (OEM) YAMAHA 3PC 2X6W+18W SUBWOOFER, (RETAIL)

Price $31.00 $129.00 $110.00 $258.00 $63.00 $69.00 $41.00 $151.00 $89.00 $101.00 $89.00 $101.00 $176.00 $165.00 $41.00 $28.00 $12.00 $12.00 $45.00 $9.00 $14.00 $21.00 $7.00 $6.00 $96.00 $73.00 $19.00 $44.00 $43.00 $25.00 $13.00 $51.00 $80.00 $59.00 $67.00
file:///D|/Documents and Settings/User.ULTRA/Desktop/New Folder/Sound.htm (1 of 2) [4/11/2001 9:09:15 PM]

MM-YA-YST-M40

YAMAHA M40 2-PC 2 X 12 WATTS, SPEAKERS WHITE (RETAIL)

$69.00

file:///D|/Documents and Settings/User.ULTRA/Desktop/New Folder/Sound.htm (2 of 2) [4/11/2001 9:09:15 PM]
Asus PartNumber VC-AS-V264GT3-AGP4 VC-AS-V3800/MAGIC/B VC-AS-V7100/2V1D/32 VC-AS-V7100/DC/32 VC-AS-V7100/PURE/16 VC-AS-V7100/PURE/32 VC-AS-V7100T/PURE/32 VC-AS-V7700/DELU/32 VC-AS-V7700/DULX/64 VC-AS-V7700/PURE/32 VC-AS-V7700/PURE/64 VC-AS-VR-100G
Description ASUS V264GT3 4MB SGRAM AGP, NO TV OUT* DISCONTINUED* ASUS V3800 TNT2 M64 BULK, 32MB PURE ASUS V7100 GEFORCE2 MX 32MB, SDRAM PURE,TWIN VIEW,DIGITAL P ASUS V7100 GEFORCE2 MX 32MB, DELUXE COMBO,TWIM VIEW,TV-OUT ASUS V7100 GEFORCE2 MX 16MB, SDRAM PURE ASUS V7100 GEFORCE2 MX 32MB, SDRAM PURE ASUS V7100 GEFORCE2 MX 32MB, SDRAM PURE,TV-OUT ASUS V7700 GEFORCE MB DDR, WITH TV-OUT VIDEO ASUS V7700 GTS 64MB DDR WITH, TY-OUT VIDEO-IN 3D GLASSES ASUS V7700 GTS 32MB DDR PURE ASUS V7700 GTS 64MB DDR PURE ASUS 3D GLASSES FOR V3800/TVR
Price $68.00 $97.00 $198.00 $280.00 $138.00 $157.00 $180.00 $334.00 $526.00 $271.00 $458.00 $39.00
Powercolor PartNumber VC-CP-GTS/32AT VC-CP-KYRO/64AT VC-CP-MX2S/32A VC-CP-MX2S/32AT VC-CP-MX2S/32ATDV VC-CP-TNT2M64/16A VC-CP-TNT2M64/16P VC-CP-TNT2M64/32A VC-CP-TNT2M64/32AT VC-CP-VANTA/8A VC-CP-WINDVD2000
Description Price POWERCOLOR GTS 32MB DDR TV-OUT, AGP WITH DVD S/W $261.00 POWERCOLOR EVILKYRO 64MB TVOUT, AGP SDRAM WITH DVD S/W $162.00 POWERCOLOR GEFORCE2 MX 32MB, SDRAM AGP WITH DVD S/W $143.00 POWERCOLOR GEFORCE2 MX TV-OUT, 32MB SDRAM AGP WITH DVD S/W $158.00 POWERCOLOR GEFORCE2 MX DUALVIE, W TV-OUT 32MB SDRAM AGP $191.00 DVD POWERCOLOR M64 16MB AGP RET, W/ DVD S/W (SNIPER M) $75.00 POWERCOLOR M64 16MB PCI RET, W/ DVD S/W (SNIPER M) $84.00 POWERCOLOR M64 32MB AGP RET, W/ DVD S/W (SNIPER M) $85.00 POWERCOLOR M64 32MB TVOUT AGP, RET W/ DVD S/W (SNIPER M) $102.00 POWERCOLOR VANTA 8MB AGP TNT2, RETAIL $54.00 POWERCOLOR WIN DVD2000 S/W $21.00
ATI PartNumber VC-ATI-RADN-32A VC-ATI-RADN-32P/ST VC-ATI-RADNLE-32A VC-ATI-RADNVE-32A/T VC-ATI-RAGEF/MAXX VC-ATI-RAGEFPRO/DVI VC-ATI-RAGEFURY/PRO VC-ATI-TVWONDER/PCI VC-ATI-W128PRO-16A VC-ATI-W128PRO-32A VC-ATI-WRADN/32A

 

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