

What operating systems will be supported?
32-bit and 64-bit Windows and Linux OS (when available).

I have an Abit AV8 which is the same basic board as the 3rd Eye minus the temp/fan/voltage display that would make it a 3rd Eye. For the most part it is a very nice MB. But there is one short comming when running Linux. The chip that is used to read the sensors and control fan speeds (named uGuru) is not supported under Linux. Abit has not made kernel modules available and does not intend to make them available and will not give the information needed to create these to the lm-sensors team. So you can not use lm-sensors or any other Linux program to monitor temps, fan speeds and the like. But I have a question. Does 3rd Eye work in Linux?canadian_psyko wrote:...
Though I have to look more, I really like the Abit 3rd Eye in my friend's computer I just built. And DFI looks interesting.

First off, for the PCI Express, you'd need the ABIT AN8 (NVIDIA) or AX8 (VIA), not the AV8. Concerning the AV8, the lack of support for the sensor chip can be a problem if you plan to rely solely on the motherboard's temperature feedback for overclocking. Personally, I've found that the temperatures given by "uGuru" are anything but accurate. Addtionally, there's a compatibility issue with a large number of Antec power supplies and there may be a few vendors still selling older AV8's that lack BIOS revision 17, which is needed for 90nm support. I also own an ASUS A8V, and IMHO, it's no better than the ABIT.hvengel wrote: So yes this is a good motherboard but there are a few problems that Abit needs to address for this to be a great motherboard.
IIRC ATI *never* said anything about updating fglrx every month. What they *did* say is that there will be a release every *two* months. We had 8.8.25 in January (was late, supposed to be December), 8.10.19 in February (keeping on track with the two month cycle).magnesium wrote:From what I've read on hardware review sites I'd have to say go with the NVidia NForce4 chipset. I'd also recommend purchasing an NVidia video card as ATI is terrible at support for linux.
[rant]After lying to the linux community for over a year saying that they were comming out with linux drivers for amd64, when they finally did come out with a driver they said they would update those drivers every month. STOP THE LIES!!![/rant]
I'm playing Doom3 on my 3500+ 1gig RAM ATI 9800 pro (256 meg)slugworth wrote:As much as i love ATI on windows, its holding me back on Linux. Its a real shame. Im trying to use E17, its usuable, but lag is pretty visibal. Im also not planning on playing any games anytime soon.

A nice feature of the ABIT AV8 (and possibly AX8) is that the VIA AC97 controller has hardware mixing support in ALSA and sounds great. However, you'd have to weigh this against the problems I mentioned above.caravela wrote:minor problems with the onboard sound card that is pure crap.


I don't know if it has the same issues I mentioned above (e.g., power supply incompatibility and no sensor support), so you may want to look over the abit forums before making a purchase.Poe wrote:Hmm... I'm planning to buy this mainboad - Abit Fatal1ty AN8 ... How do you thing about this mobo? Any 'special' problems with this?