You are not alone.
I have a Radeon 9000 and had my driver killed somehow. I haven't found the Omega driver yet which makes it able to do 3D again.
Sooooo I am using onboard graphics with every offturnable option turned off.
I have given up on that thing.
' Wrote:for those who missed it: the moral of it all is ----> traders with teeth are fun for pirates. - within reason.
The easiest way to fix most problems with the ATi cards is to use the reference driver that can normally be d/l'd from the ATi website.
I *know* that sounds a little lame, but pretty much every software problem I've had with an ATi card has been fixed by either upgrading the driver to the latest one OR by going back to the previous driver.
' Wrote:The easiest way to fix most problems with the ATi cards is to use the reference driver that can normally be d/l'd from the ATi website.
I *know* that sounds a little lame, but pretty much every software problem I've had with an ATi card has been fixed by either upgrading the driver to the latest one OR by going back to the previous driver.
No, sorry, it's not. Catalyst driver-installer do not find my hardware at all. And I have tried every single one available in the net. Do you know how much time that took?
' Wrote:for those who missed it: the moral of it all is ----> traders with teeth are fun for pirates. - within reason.
' Wrote:No, sorry, it's not. Catalyst driver-installer do not find my hardware at all. And I have tried every single one available in the net. Do you know how much time that took?
To fix that problem in XP, I generally do 1 of 2 things.
1) Install Microsoft's Generic VGA Drivers and run setup again and hope it picks up
2) Point Microsoft the the C:\ATI\Whatvever directory so it finds the drivers itself and works on installing it. It'll only install display drivers this way though so if you want the CCC, you'd have to run setup for that separately.