Great site, folks. Discovered it a couple of days ago, and it seems that there are a few people who should be able to sort me out with a query (in a manner of speaking). I'm about to get ADSL, and I'm in the market for a DSL modem.
Reading through a DSL FAQ from somewhere, I happened upon this little snippet :
"Do some PC's have problems supporting USB devices? - Yes, this is true. There is a problem with the via KT7 chipset (which is found on several models of motherboard) causing the USB ports to loose power at apparently random intervals. The symptoms would be that the Broadband ADSL will usually work fine for a short time and then the modem would just switch itself off. After a reboot of the computer it will be OK again for a few minutes."
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What's all that about - and does (a) anyone here use a USB ADSL modem, and (b) does / has anyone suffered from the above problem? Is it a TERRIBLE nuisance?
I don't know much about motherboards........ here's the specs of mine [ahem]....... Socket 370 ; Celeron 633 ; SiS 630 chipset ; PC Chips M758LMR. I'm reading this from the manual. God knows what it means.
The question is - (a) is the above anything to do with "the via KT7 chipset", and (b) if so (or if NOT), will the USB problem affect me?
I believe there are alternatives to USB.......PCI; and ethernet. According to my manual, I have - "Built-in Ethernet LAN" (10BaseT / 100BaseTX). Would that let me use an ethernet modem, or whatever?
Does anyone use non-USB ADSL modems? How are they? PCI modems are nicely priced - but how much processor power do they take? Is it a nuisance?
Thanks.