derSammler wrote:Try the contact form on the website, maybe the author still reads the mails. However, I never used anything else then the shareware version. The few additional features of the registered version are not that important to me.
ps: for older systems (< Pentium) I'd recommend using an older version. This gives better benchmark graphs/comparison.
It is better than anything that I have tried to date. The thoroughness of the tests and benchmarks is impressive.
A couple of examples of it's usefulness is that:
1) I was having difficulty identifying the motherboard- had about given up when I was browsing the screens of Dr. Hardware and it identified the motherboard outright. A SY-25 J/K/L made by SOYO - after that, obtaining the jumper and configuration setting was a snap.
2) Secondly, the turbo function of my latest build- a 486dx2 66 - using the same motherboard mentioned already- was confusing the heck out of me. Turns out that the turbo function actually works as you might expect in that the opposite of what it was originally used for. The Turbo button, when activated actually runs at the full 66MHZ speed and turning it OFF slows it down to about 37MHZ. This determined and verified by using the benchmarks included in Dr. Hardware. (On the LED display- I used 33MHZ/66MHZ)
I agree that the shareware version has all the functionality I need. But because of the great benefits I have already gotten from using it- I thought that I should support the author if he is still around. I will indeed try the contact email- sent one out earlier and will wait to see.
I am using the last released DOS version- do you have an earlier version available that you could share?
Anyway- thanks for the tip. Couldn't be happier with the software!
-- Regards, Joe
Expect out of life, that which you put into it.