| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 3012.1 |  | DANGER::ARRIGHI | and miles to go before I sleep | Tue May 20 1997 15:20 | 9 | 
|  |     Have you checked their web site to see if you have the latest rev.
    drivers?  Even if you bought the card recently, it may have been
    sitting around for a while.  The SB16 in some file names is not a
    problem.  
    
    Have you let Win95 assign the addresses and interrupts for everything
    on your system, or might there be a conflict?
    
    Tony
 | 
| 3012.2 |  | BBQ::WOODWARDC | ...but words can break my heart | Tue May 20 1997 19:49 | 11 | 
|  |     slight tangent,
    
    "SB16" means "16-bit" (i.e. Audio CD quality)
    
    "AWE32" means "32 voices", not "32-bit". Most (I don't know 100% for
    sure ;') AWE sound cards are '16-bit, and therefore will (assuming SB
    compatable) run with 'SB16' drivers.
    
    hth,
    
    H
 | 
| 3012.3 | tried them all | ANNECY::HOTCHKISS |  | Wed May 21 1997 05:47 | 3 | 
|  |     re .1 got all the latest drivers and tried all variations of self
    assignment and forced assignment of DMA/IRQ.
    I reckon it is a basic design fault frankly.
 | 
| 3012.4 | Reset PNP configuration data? | STAR::DZIEDZIC | Tony Dziedzic - DTN 381-2438 | Wed May 21 1997 07:05 | 11 | 
|  |     Re .3:
    
    What type of video card is in the system, and does it use any
    IRQs?  The problem sounds like an IRQ (or DMA) conflict.
    
    Most Windows-95 aware systems have an option in the BIOS Setup
    program to clear the "ESCD" (plug & play) configuration data.
    You may wish to remove the AWE32 (via Control Panel->System,
    the Device tab), reboot the system, stop in Setup, clear the
    PNP config data, then continue.  Windows 95 should reconfigure
    to avoid conflicts.
 |