A Motherboard That Doesn't Require An OS 277
An anonymous reader submits a link to this review of "motherboard that allows access to your multimedia devices via a special BIOS. No operating system required! Good for a home entertainment PC I guess." The review says that it will come bundled with a TV tuner card, too.
bios (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:bios (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:bios (Score:5, Funny)
Re:bios (Score:5, Funny)
I'm sure I read something on Slashdot a while back which was meant to be very worrying, like Microsoft proposing standards for BIOS which lock people ever more into Windows. That Soyo is playing with a motherboard which requires no operating system, I rather wonder if the CEO of Soyo will be taking to carrying a gun and checking into hotels using an assumed name because he feels someone from Redmond considers this all very unsavory and threatening and intends to bump him off.
Re:bios (Score:5, Funny)
Re:bios (Score:5, Funny)
Re:bios (Score:2, Funny)
Actually...... (Score:4, Interesting)
1 A live OS
2 A file system (that I think maybe even now has read/write drivers for QNX's 2 file systems & all the FAT derivitives, plus read-only NTFS support)
3 A very elegant colour graphical enviroment/GUI (that beats the crap out of X-Windows & all the layered crudge now normally ontop of it)
4 Networking capabilities (including drivers for common NICs & dial-up modems)
& 5 a web browser (that even I think now supports a ported Shockwave/Flash plugin, if there's a HDD in the system with the required space formated with a supported file system).
Now even though there's obviously a RAM drive thing going on here, there's no reason why moderm BIOSes can't do the same thing, especially considering contemporary flash RAM sizes mean many BIOSes are to a good degree spare space. From what I remember someone posting here on Slashdot, when this or a very similar topic was previously posted (seems like yonks ago now), some PC flash RAM BIOSes are more than half empty, leading to this potential being investigated, simply as a by-product of finding something productive to do with the left over bytes on the BIOS's flash memory.
Re:bios (Score:5, Insightful)
The fact that PC makers keep reinventing the wheel is annoying.
Re:bios (Score:5, Funny)
Re:bios (Score:5, Funny)
Better yet: Sing it with Mitch Bradley [firmworks.com] : Firmware, Open Firmware... [sun.com]
Re:bios (Score:4, Informative)
OpenFirmware (Score:2)
OpenFirmware is all nice and dandy (I use it on Sun and Macs) and I'd love to use it on anything which resembles a PC (not so much on desktop machines, but very much on server like machines), however I have yet to see a OpenFirmware implementation I could use.
I know there are implementations for embedded computers and hardware which requires some sort of BIOS (non-PC compatible stuff), but no need for that. So far FreeBSD has something useable with their bootloader, but it of course depends on the BIOS of
Re:bios (Score:5, Interesting)
IMO, a big huge part of the Linux/Windows/CustomOS Kernel (name: the drivers) should be made part of the BIOS.
When you add a third-party card on your computer (say, a Radeon), it should have its own BIOS and be driven by that.
That's what a BIOS is for: provide an abstraction layer to the hardware. It is just failing at this role since a long time.
Re:bios (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:bios (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:bios (Score:5, Interesting)
But imagine the thing: No drivers to write for any OS!!! Wouldn't that be amazing? The manufacturer would write a driver embedded in its hardware, flashable, and tada! All OSes out there benefit from the full-fledge piece of hardware: Linux, Windows, BSD, BeOS, AmigaOS, MS-DOS 1.5 uh, no wait...
The thing is people writing a driver for Windows and people writing driver for Linux are pretty much doing the same thing. What a waste of ressources and time!
BTW, it is not extream, but extreme.
Re:bios (Score:3, Insightful)
Before having a universal driver in a BIOS on an add-in card would be useful, you would need specifications for interfacing with said universal driver so it could be used by the various OSes you mention.
Developing some sort of 'common driver api' can happen regardless of if the actual driver code lies on a BIOS or is loaded from an HD and give mostly the same results (you would just have to load the driver from a disk or the net).
Re:bios (Score:4, Funny)
Re:bios (Score:2)
Does it bother anyone else (Score:2)
Ever had a virus that hosed your bios? You've now got a dead motherboard unless you've got a burner and some extra ROMS laying around (doesn't everyone?). Some companies have instituted an auto-switching dual bios [giga-byte.com] that helps mitigate this risk, while others are jumper switchable [aopen.com.tw]
Still... it bothers me to have an irreversible "kill" feature on my computer... particularly since I'm error-prone like most people. Ever had a BIOS flash interrupted? I ha
Re:bios (Score:3, Insightful)
A BIOS by any other name (Score:3, Insightful)
Bottom line: "BIOS" is just a name. It used to stand for "Basic I/O Services", but now it means "whatever's convenient to have in onboard ROM so you don't have to read it off a disk." Words change.
Re:bios (Score:2, Insightful)
Just when I overclock mine... (Score:5, Funny)
Still Crashes (Score:2, Insightful)
I was really looking to get rid of that (Score:2, Funny)
Isn't that an OS? (Score:5, Insightful)
Isn't an operating system a program that allows you to control your devices? This still does that, its just all contained in the ROM. Pretty neat, but still an OS. Surely not as bloated as MS media center. (note: I haven't actually tried media center, I'm just guessing)
Re:Isn't that an OS? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Isn't that an OS? (Score:2)
That said, who in the world has the mentality that Windows is the only OS?
Re:Isn't that an OS? (Score:2)
Re:Isn't that an OS? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Isn't that an OS? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Isn't that an OS? (Score:5, Funny)
If you can't play Solitaire on it, it's not an OS.
Re:Isn't that an OS? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Isn't that an OS? (Score:5, Funny)
a) GUI
b) web browser
c) media player
d) text editor
e) solitaire
f) metadata filesystem
g) NSA backdoors
h) severely restricted CLI
i) device driver incompatibilities
j) minimum 128M memory footprint
k) MSN beg screens
and finally
l) royalties for MS
This may not be a complete list, feel free to add (but not subtract from) it.
Re:Isn't that an OS? (Score:3, Funny)
M) Clippy
Re:Isn't that an OS? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Isn't that an OS? (Score:2)
I predict: (Score:5, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Deja Vu (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Deja Vu (Score:3, Interesting)
Bah.. that's nothing (Score:5, Funny)
That would be Linux. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:That would be Linux. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:That would be Linux. (Score:2)
Re:That would be Linux. (Score:2)
Since when did Linux have a monopoly on the firmware!
I have seen it! (Score:5, Interesting)
It is even possible on today's platforms, just take some PXA arm processor, wire some flash and ram chips to it, connect some ancient terminal to serial and alas, you have a linux machine.
Re:Bah.. that's nothing (Score:3, Funny)
Oh great.... (Score:5, Insightful)
BIOS = BASIC input output system.
Its just not meant to do more. Blurring the edges like this is just plain silly - a duplication of effort at best. Another thing to go wrong and more complexity where its not needed. Now we have bloatware in the HARDWARE too!!!!
Re:Oh great.... (Score:2)
We've had bloat ware in hardware for quite some time, called ia32. And thankfully, AMD has upped the ante to a 64 bit instruction set.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Oh great.... (Score:2)
I, on the other hand, know quite a few people who would be very glad to have this in their pc's.
No more having to boot the entire os, logging in and start a program just to listen to a cd or watch a dvd.
Yes. There *are* people who doesn't own a seperate dvd, cd and tv, who instead uses their computer for all those tasks due to space or economical reasons.
I doubt that things like these will become the standard, so you'll still have all those other boa
Re:Oh great.... (Score:3, Insightful)
If its just a closed-source BIOS that can play TV and CDs and DVDs, then it's just a badly designed all-in-one that's more expensive than the ones that they sell at Wall Mart.
Re:Oh great.... (Score:2)
On the other hand, it could potentially remove the extra layer of complexity required because the OS would no longer need to override the bios functions and could concentrate solely on memory management and task scheduling. Another possibility resulting from this could be better hardware compatibility for free operating systems since drivers would be "hidden" in
Um, not to be a smart ass.. (Score:5, Interesting)
New meaning (Score:5, Funny)
I feel sorry for the site... (Score:2)
Re:I feel sorry for the site... (Score:2)
So what your saying is they haven't learned and are still using that 266 with 64 megs of RAM connected to a DSL line.
Linux bios (Score:3, Insightful)
Phoenix is attempting to make a transition from a bios to a trusted startup environment. This means that it may be hard to install operating systems that are not signed by Phoenix... for money. Thus, windows, Redhat EL, and other commercial operating systems will continue to work fine. This may make custom Linux installs next to impossible - without modchips. (can anyone say xbox?)
A motherboard that doesn't require an OS (Score:2, Funny)
Macintoshes (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Macintoshes (Score:3, Informative)
http://members.aol.com/plforth/ofpong/
The search I used was "open firmware pong". Open firmware would be the name for the BIOS-ish thing used in Macs and Sun systems, and perhaps others I'm not aware of.
Wheel-reinventing alert (Score:5, Funny)
Hmm, let's see: a computer with a small piece of dedicated software in ROM, a TV tuner card and a monitor? Last I checked, I could get that sort of device, minus the messy VGA and keyboard cables, and with about zero boot time, at K-Mart for about $100, and with a bigger screen too.
BIOS (Score:5, Funny)
Bios update (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bios update (Score:2)
I'm not sure i understand the point (Score:2, Interesting)
BTW, is this feature useless if you computer is already powered up ?
But it's pretty cool to see it is possible!
Please correct me if i said anything stupid !
Good article.. neat product. Here's the text (Score:2, Informative)
Model: SY-P4VAL
Manufacturer: Soyo
Provider: Soyo
Reviewed By: Miguel
Review Date:
Page 1
Board Layout & Features
This is not meant to be an enthusiast board so there's no cool colored PCB. In fact, at first glance, it looks just like any other motherboard. It's what it offers that sets it apart from all the rest. The board is almost identical to Soyo's SY-P4VGA with the exception that it carries the Whizpro BIOS utility instead of the AWARD BIOS
And it runs which OS? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd hate to give up all the things that an OS supports for me, but I suppose that many of them (memory management, processes, libraries, windowing, keyboard, filesystem) aren't necessary on an embedded system. As long as there's a cross-compiler for it and a way to get that stuff on, you may well be able to work with just the BIOS.
Oh, and I tried to RTFA, which would presumably answer my question, but it's slashdotted, so I'm really aiming my question at the embedded software developers out there.
MSI MEGA 180 has a similar feature. (Score:4, Informative)
It doesn't say that it includes the TV capability. However, audio functions work without any additional hardware at all out of the box. No HD, Processor, or memory required...
Interesting idea if you really want to save power. I'd rather fork over a few more cents per hour and have the capability to actually do something with the media though at a moments notice.
When the BIOS is your OS... (Score:2, Funny)
Ummmmm... WHY? (Score:3, Insightful)
TV-Tuner functionality is questionable at best in a full-fledged OS. But in a BIOS?? Surly you must be joking!
I love that I can play my CDs and MP3s on my pc... while I work on other things. This monopolizes the whole system and turns it into an expensive DVD player. (Name one thing this can do that a cheap DVD player and a TV can't)
Not to mention that it's an embarrasing waste of resources. A 366mhz G3 could do this and more.
Oh, and hypothetically, I think it would be possible to hack something like this into a machine using openFirmware.
As an aside, it wouldn't be too difficult to write a small OS, deriving bits from Linux or BSD which could do the same thing and only take a few (under 5) seconds to boot (which would be quite plausable as you'd only need to load VERY few drivers). I could boot BeOS on my 750mhz athlon to the desktop in under 10 seconds.
Re:Ummmmm... WHY? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Ummmmm... WHY? (Score:2)
How dare you. For us non-rich folk it's a good way to turn your PC which has a monitor anyways into a TV. And the WinTV PCI cards are very keen indeed. Good quality, relatively cheap.
Tom
Re:Ummmmm... WHY? (Score:3, Informative)
What does that mean? I know I have build a PVR myself (based on Linux), and I'm sure Tivo owners want their systems to have "TV-Tuner functionality".
It can do everything a Tivo can do, and much more.
You just try recording 720x480 TV s
Reminds me of... (Score:5, Informative)
... this project [linuxbios.org]!
Seriously folks, I don't mean to get embroiled in the issue of semantics, but there are all sorts of devices in which their OS is lightweight enough to reside in ROM. If the boot code never hands control of the system off to a secondary module (loaded from a disk, for example) how is it not the OS?
Hooray for us BIOS guys! (Score:5, Interesting)
Now bringing home about twice the bacon those same folks did, writing BIOS code, I just smile.
And as you see, we got the world by the bawls, us BIOS guys!
(seriously though, I think the BIOS is a piece of legacy crap that we need to get rid off... too bad it pays my bills)
Re:Hooray for us BIOS guys! (Score:2)
I've mostly recovered from my LinuxBIOS hacking...
It's called a console (Score:3, Informative)
Sounds like an OS to me (Score:5, Interesting)
That sounds like an OS..
So its in rom.. so what? Most embedded devices are that way...
Re:Sounds like an OS to me (Score:2)
Increasing what a piece of hardware knows about itself and can do by itself makes writing drivers (potentially) easier and more robust, and pushes that responsibility back to the hardware manufacturer in an OS neutral way.
If more devices had something like Vesa mode as well, then the road to basic hardware functionality would be easier for all sorts of software producers.
So, all in all, a
Somebody call Neal Stepfenson... (Score:3, Funny)
This is a BIOS? (Score:2)
This is new? (Score:2, Interesting)
Load "*",8,1 (Score:4, Insightful)
prior art (Score:3)
People missing the point/I'd buy one (Score:5, Informative)
The intended audience for this is obviously the living-room entertainment machine sort of application. For instance, rather than have to wait while the OS loads, and then use some software-based UI just to play a CD, you just have to push the on-button, drop in your mp3 or audio CD and it'll automatically start playing within seconds - no having to turn on the TV to check things are ready/you've pushed a button on your remote keyboard at the wrong time etc.
If you want to play standard applications - just boot into your normal OS and fire up your divx player, stepmania etc. If you have replaced your home entertainment CD/mp3/DVD player with this and just want to access one of those functions in a UI that you haven't kludged together, with no OS wait/booting screens etc - no problem.
My only major request would be that it plays xvid/divx encoded avis in the BIOS environment as well - licence issues aside, I can easily foresee this being a great addition to one of those hushpc computers.
Microsoft 2008 BIOS PRO (Score:5, Funny)
Welcome to Windows 2008 BIOS PRO.... You have 78 critical BIOS updates to perform.
To uninstall Internet Explorer: Replace chips 45- 1035 and solder points 20, 40, 30, and 90. (At least you would be able to uninstall it I guess).
When installing Real player: It permanently writes spyware to part of your flash memory and then charges you for it.
Well, that's nice... (Score:2, Funny)
I mean...
Does it support Ogg Vorbis?
Er, wait...
Shit. I'm out of material.
One-upmanship (Score:2)
slashdotted (mirror (google's cache)) (Score:3, Informative)
*whistles* (Score:3, Informative)
The problem with being a geek, is that you never run out of cool crap that you "have to" buy... they keep bringing cooler and cooler shit to market.
just when I thought I wanted a mini-itx [mini-itx.com] mobo for my PVR project this comes along... oy vey!
e.
This review is annoying (Score:3, Informative)
Also look at the page on performance [extrememhz.com] and you will see them compare it to the MSI KM2M Combo-L. If you do a google search [google.com] on those terms, the first link is their review of that board [extrememhz.com], which can take a "1GHz to 2600+ processor." On the performance page they benchmark the Soyo P4VAL (Projected price, $69 without tuner) with "Pentium 4 2.4GHz 533MHz" ($124) against the MSI KM2M ($54) with an unspecified CPU, but it does not have 333FSB support so it can't be more than an Athlon XP 2600+ 266MHz FSB ($77 - Actually the 333FSB model is $2 cheaper.) Hence, $193 for the soyo vs $131 for the MSI plus its most powerful CPU. The MSI does almost as well on the CPU benchmark (4391 vs 5810 PCMarks) and does much worse than the Soyo on memory (2400 vs 4844) and their conclusion for this page is "The Soyo P4VAL will have an MSRP of around $69 (without TV tuner, remote, etc, just the board), which is only about $13 more than the KM2M motherboard. It will obviously offer you much more in terms of features and performance and therefore, it's simply a better buy." So let me get this straight, a full size motherboard which, with the tested CPU will run you $63 more, being used for a purpose which does not require massive memory bandwidth, is a better buy? Yes it offers the goofy BIOS menu but that thing doesn't even seem to have SVCD support.
That's right, they don't bother to tell us if it supports nonstandard-bitrate VCD (known as XVCD) and if it doesn't support XVCD, SVCD, and XSVCD, I consider that to be an amazingly crippled featureset for a multimedia PC, one which will mandate the use of a real live hard-drive-installed (or net-booted, I guess) operating system. Neither their etbios page [extrememhz.com] nor soyo's page for the board [soyousa.com] bother to tell you what types of media are played, but the review says "You have access to multi-media functions such as AUDIO/MP3 CD playback, VCD playback, DVD playback and TV Tuner support" which implies that that's all the functions. No MPEG4, for example, and no SVCD. This bios will only read media on CDs as far as I can tell from the review, so you can't play media off a hard drive, USB, memory stick, etc etc. In other words, it will do the things a $80 DVD player from Wal-Mart will do for you, but its output probably won't be as good (I don't see any component output on this baby, but my $80 Pana DVD-S35S is progressive scan, supports VCD, SVCD, XVCD, XSVCD, DVD, MP3, WMA, and JPEG.)
In fact, the reviewer couldn't even figure out how to get the TV feature to autoscan to select only good channels (a feature which might not even be present, for all anyone including soyo will tell us) but was impressed that there was an escape function to go back to the menu. Woop-de-doo!
All in all, this article is unprofessional crap, and the etbios is basically useless. The fact that it has funky bios means that it's likely to be a pain in the ass sometime down the road. This looks like a product looking for a purpose. Were it done right, with access to filesystems not on optical media, and support for additional codecs in some format, it would be interesting, but this product is as goofy as the review.
I really like the concept, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
And, if it wasn't for the fact that I have a modded X-Box that I paid $125 that, for the most part, does all of this except for tv tuning and has the added advantage of playing X-Box games as well. By the time I build this mobo into a case, it's gonna be the same size as an X-Box too...
The review hit the nail on the head, though. If they did the same thing, but made it micro-ATX and threw on on-board wifi, people would jump on it. I know I'm looking for a small multimedia hub for the bedroom. Heck, I don't even want to put a hard drive in it. I just want a shell that will pull stuff off my main PC.
BIOS = Basic Input Output System (Score:2)
But I do get your point.
Re:BIOS = Built-in Operating System (Score:2)
Re:BIOS = Built-in Operating System (Score:5, Informative)
No, BIOS stands for "Basic Input/Output System." That's right, Neal Stephenson got it wrong in Snow Crash. BIOS is one of many ways for a computer to organize its input and output devices so that it can be accessed by a proper operating system. I'm sure there are plenty of geeks here who can tell you more about it than me.
Apple and Sun don't use IBM style PC BIOS. They use OpenFirmware. Iduno what the other kids use.
Re:BIOS = Built-in Operating System (Score:2)