BitWrangler wrote on 2026-05-23, 12:43:
MattRocks wrote on 2026-05-23, 12:10:
BitWrangler wrote on 2026-05-23, 12:00:
There seems to be something whack about the drivers for the 8500DV as well, I was seeing some suggestions on digital video forums that the mainstream catalysts did not fully support it, and for full functionality the 7500 AIW drivers had to be installed.... which I am guessing is for the Rage Theatre implementation side.
As they use the same Rage Theatre chip, AIW 7500 drivers will bind - but that will not guarantee the VIVO ports are behaving properly.
Is this relevant to the driver story? Apparently XP service pack 2 nerfed the supplied drivers, seemingly ATI washed their hands and said it was Pinnacle's problem... https://community.avid.com/forums/p/14122/79460.aspx
And I know SP2 was the big security patch for XP as it was hole-ier than a pair of fishnets.
Yes, but does that error implicate ATI's Catalyst installer?
Speculation only but I think that particular nugget is a sign of bad faith from Avid and/or ATI, coupled with user ignorance. I think the real technical problem is a minor one. Liquid 7 just needs DX9 compliant drivers, not DX9 hardware acceleration - so, any 8500 GPU drivers from DX9 era should be enough.
However, instead of paying for the DX9 update, Avid and ATI removed all references to the AGP card from their support sites - that is not cool and it left film studios stumped.
It's unclear who owned responsibility, but the signs are that Pinnacle owned support responsibility because Pinnacle had been distributing driver updates during the DX8 era. Hence, I speculate Avid inherited that responsibility. ATI also did not maintain the drivers, but being generous they might have been contractually constrained by whatever was agreed in the Pinnacle-ATI partnership.
Drivers for the Radeon 8500 GPU were maintained, as were drivers for the Rage Theatre, so I suspect using the INF bare drivers instead of full Catalyst install would sidestep the install problem. But, enterprise users can't hack INF files while complying with corporate policies! Other forums show Avid support were being very unhelpful and directed customers to buy "any" AGP card with 64Mb RAM.
That was really bad advice and shows Avid misunderstood the Pinnacle product because you can’t put a 64MB Matrox in the AGP slot without disabling the real-time T&L previews.
And it’s really bad advice to give professional film studios who need locked down information security and support guarantees - those customers can't have random coax input on the workstation, or bundled OEM demos in the box, or second hand parts. It's as though Avid had absolutely no clue who Pinnacle's clients were!
And, all of the complaining users were trying to stay "current," but that is a moot point from a retro perspective - we just need drivers that work in their intended context (Liquid 5/6, DX8, Win2K/XP).
Desktop timeline [ MOS 7501 → 68030 → x86(P5/MMX) → x86(K6-2) → x86(K7*) → PPC(G3*) → x86-64(K8) → x86-64(Xeon) → x86-64(i5) → x86-64(i7) ] * lost