Mebvm 101
Mebvm 101
USER’S MANUAL
USER'S NOTICE
No part of this manual, including the products and software described in it, may be repro-
duced, transmitted, transcribed, stored in a retrieval system, or translated into any language in
any form or by any means, except documentation kept by the purchaser for backup purposes,
without the express written permission of ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC. (“ASUS”).
ASUS PROVIDES THIS MANUAL “AS IS” WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PAR-
TICULAR PURPOSE. IN NO EVENT SHALL ASUS, ITS DIRECTORS, OFFICERS,
EMPLOYEES OR AGENTS BE LIABLE FOR ANY INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDEN-
TAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF
PROFITS, LOSS OF BUSINESS, LOSS OF USE OR DATA, INTERRUPTION OF BUSI-
NESS AND THE LIKE), EVEN IF ASUS HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY
OF SUCH DAMAGES ARISING FROM ANY DEFECT OR ERROR IN THIS MANUAL
OR PRODUCT.
Product warranty or service will not be extended if: (1) the product is repaired, modified or
altered, unless such repair, modification of alteration is authorized in writing by ASUS; or (2)
the serial number of the product is defaced or missing.
Products and corporate names appearing in this manual may or may not be registered trade-
marks or copyrights of their respective companies, and are used only for identification or
explanation and to the owners’ benefit, without intent to infringe.
• Intel, LANDesk, and Pentium are registered trademarks of Intel Corporation.
• IBM and OS/2 are registered trademarks of International Business Machines.
• Symbios is a registered trademark of Symbios Logic Corporation.
• Windows and MS-DOS are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation.
• XGstudio and Soft Synthesizer is a trademark of the Yamaha Corporation.
• Adobe and Acrobat are registered trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated.
The product name and revision number are both printed on the product itself. Manual revi-
sions are released for each product design represented by the digit before and after the period
of the manual revision number. Manual updates are represented by the third digit in the manual
revision number.
For previous or updated manuals, BIOS, drivers, or product release information, contact ASUS
at http://www.asus.com.tw or through any of the means indicated on the following page.
SPECIFICATIONS AND INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS MANUAL ARE FUR-
NISHED FOR INFORMATIONAL USE ONLY, AND ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT
ANY TIME WITHOUT NOTICE, AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSTRUED AS A COM-
MITMENT BY ASUS. ASUS ASSUMES NO RESPONSIBILITY OR LIABILITY FOR
ANY ERRORS OR INACCURACIES THAT MAY APPEAR IN THIS MANUAL, INCLUD-
ING THE PRODUCTS AND SOFTWARE DESCRIBED IN IT.
Copyright © 1998 ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC. All Rights Reserved.
Technical Support
Tel (English): +886-2-2894-3447 ext. 706
Tel (Chinese): +886-2-2894-3447 ext. 701
Fax: +886-2-2895-9254
Email: [email protected]
Newsgroup: news2.asus.com.tw
WWW: www.asus.com.tw
FTP: ftp.asus.com.tw/pub/ASUS
Technical Support
Fax: +1-510-608-4555
BBS: +1-510-739-3774
Email: [email protected]
WWW: www.asus.com
FTP: ftp.asus.com.tw/pub/ASUS
Technical Support
Hotline: 49-2102-499712
BBS: 49-2102-448690
Email: [email protected]
WWW: www.asuscom.de
FTP: ftp.asuscom.de/pub/ASUSCOM
This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B
digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to
provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installa-
tion. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if
not installed and used in accordance with manufacturer’s instructions, may cause
harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that
interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause
harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by
turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interfer-
ence by one or more of the following measures:
• Re-orient or relocate the receiving antenna.
• Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.
• Connect the equipment to an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the
receiver is connected.
• Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.
WARNING! Be sure that there is sufficient air circulation across the processor’s
heatsink by regularly checking that your CPU fan is working. Without sufficient
circulation, the processor could overheat and damage both the processor and the
motherboard. You may install an auxiliary fan, if necessary.
I. INTRODUCTION
Sections/Checklist
This manual is divided into the following sections:
I. Introduction Manual information and checklist
II. Features Information and specifications concerning this product
III. Hardware Setup Instructions on setting up the motherboard
IV. BIOS Setup Instructions on setting up the BIOS software
V. Software Setup Information on setting up the included support software
VI. Software Reference Reference material for the included support software
Item Checklist
Check that your package is complete. If you discover damaged or missing items,
please contact your retailer.
(1) ASUS Motherboard
(1) IDE ribbon cable for master and slave drives
(1) Floppy ribbon cable for (1) 5.25” floppy and (2) 3.5” floppies
(1) COM2 connector with bracket
(1) Bag of spare jumper caps
(1) Support CD with drivers and utilities
(1) This Motherboard User’s Manual
• AGP 3D AGP VGA: Features onboard ATI 3D Rage Pro AGP 2X (8MB
Features
II. FEATURES
Smart Series
sor of Windows 95 must be used.
• Double the IDE Transfer Speed: IDE transfers using UltraDMA/33 Bus Mas-
ter IDE can handle rates up to 33MB/sec. The best of all is that this new technol-
ogy is compatible with existing ATA-2 IDE specifications so there is no need to
upgrade current hard drives or cables.
• Concurrent PCI: Concurrent PCI allows multiple PCI transfers from PCI mas-
ter buses to memory to CPU.
• PC’98 Compliant: Both the BIOS and hardware levels of the motherboard meet
PC’98 compliancy. The new PC’98 requirements for systems and components are
based on the following high-level goals: Support for Plug and Play compatibility
and power management for configuring and managing all system components,
and 32-bit device drivers and setup procedures for Windows 95/98/NT.
• SDRAM Optimized Performance: ASUS smart series motherboards support
the new generation memory, Synchronous Dynamic Random Access Memory
(SDRAM), which increases the data transfer rate from 264MB/s max using EDO
memory to 528MB/s max using SDRAM.
mode. This function reduces both energy consumption and system noise, and
is a important feature to implement silent PC systems.
• Dual Function Power Button: The system can be in one of two states, one is
Sleep mode and the other is the Soft-Off mode. Pushing the power button for
less than 4 seconds places the system into Sleep mode. When the power button
is pressed for more than 4 seconds, it enters the Soft-Off mode.
• Remote Ring On (requires modem): This allows a computer to be turned on
remotely through an internal or external modem. With this benefit on-hand, any
user can access vital information from their computer from anywhere in the world!
• Message LED (requires ACPI OS support): Chassis LEDs now act as infor-
mation providers. Through the way a particular LED illuminates, the user can
determine the stage the computer is in. A simple glimpse provides useful infor-
mation to the user.
Motherboard Parts
II. FEATURES
T: USB 1
B: USB 2
Serial COM 1
Parallel Port
VGA Connector
T: Joystick/Midi
B: Out/In/Mic
(optional)
Wake-On-LAN
Header
AGP Port
2 PCI Slots
Audio Codec
(optional)
Multi-I/O Chip
Serial COM2
Header
1 ISA Slot
ATXPWR
FS2
FS3
FS4
USB Row
T: Port 1 0
0 1
DIMM Socket 1 (64/72-bit, 168-pin module) 1
B:Port 2
2
DIMM Socket 2 (64/72-bit, 168-pin module) 3
COM1
Rage IIC 2 MB
VGA
III. H/W SETUP
Line Chipset
SDRAM
GAME_AUDIO
Out
VGAEN
SECONDARY
SDRAM
SDRAM
Line
2 MB
2 MB
In
AUDIOEN
32-bit
Mic
WOL_CON PCI
In
Audio PRIMARY
CD_IN
CPU_FAN
Accelerated Graphics Port (AGP) CR2032 3V
Lithium Cell
BIOS Power
Multi-I/O &
2Mbit Flash EEPROM
ASIC
Keyboard (Programmable BIOS)
COM2 Controller IR Buzzer
Expansion Slots
1) DIMM1, DIMM2 p. 17 168-Pin DIMM Memory Support
2) Socket 370 p. 19 Central Processing Unit (CPU) Support
3) PCI1, PCI2 p. 20 32-bit PCI Bus Expansion Slots
4) ISA1 p. 20 16-bit ISA Bus Expansion Slot
Connectors
1) PS2KBMS P. 22 PS/2 Mouse Connector (6-pin female)
2) PS2KBMS p. 22 PS/2 Keyboard Connector (6-pin female)
3) USB p. 23 Universal Serial BUS Ports 1 & 2 (Two 4-pin female)
FS2
FS3
III. H/W SETUP
FS4
CPU 112.0MHz 115.0MHz 120.0MHz 124.0MHz 124.0MHz 133.0MHz 133.0MHz
Jumpers
BF3
BF2
BF1
BF0
BF3
BF2
BF1
BF0
BF3
BF2
BF1
BF0
3 3 3 3
2 2 2 2
1 1 1 1
3.0x(3/1) 3.5x(7/2) 4.0x(4/1) 4.5x(9/2)
BF3
BF2
BF1
BF0
BF3
BF2
BF1
BF0
BF3
BF2
BF1
BF0
WARNING! Frequencies above 100MHz exceed the specifications for the on-
board Intel Chipset and are not guaranteed to be stable. PCI frequencies above
33MHz exceed the specifications for PCI cards and are not guaranteed to be stable.
SPD Support
This motherboard supports SPD DIMMs. If non-SPD DIMMs are used, you will be
warned during boot-up to set the timings manually.
88 60 20
pins pins pins
Lock Lock
System Memory
III. H/W SETUP
The DIMMs must be 3.3V Unbuffered for this motherboard. To determine the DIMM
type, check the notches on the DIMMs (see figure below).
The notches on the DIMM module will shift between left, center, or right to identify
the type and also to prevent the wrong type from being inserted into the DIMM slot on
the motherboard. You must tell your retailer the correct DIMM type before purchas-
ing. This motherboard supports four clock signals.
WARNING! Without a fan circulating air on the CPU, the CPU can overheat
and cause damage to both the CPU and the motherboard.
To install a CPU, first turn off your system and remove its cover. Locate the ZIF
socket and open it by first pulling the lever sideways away from the socket then
upwards to a 90-degree right angle. Insert the CPU with the correct orientation as
shown. The notched corner should point towards the end the of the lever. Because
the CPU has a corner pin for two of the four corners, the CPU will only fit in the one
orientation as shown. The picture is for reference only; you should have a CPU fan
CPU
is required to insert the CPU. Once completely inserted, close the socket’s lever
while holding down the CPU.
NOTE: Set the bus frequency and multiple for your Socket 370 processor.
Notch
WARNING! Make sure that you unplug your power supply when adding or
removing expansion cards or other system components. Failure to do so may
cause severe damage to both your motherboard and expansion cards.
6. Secure the card on the slot with the screw you removed in step 4.
7. Replace the computer system’s cover.
8. Setup the BIOS if necessary
9. Install the necessary software drivers for your expansion card.
Expansion Cards
III. H/W SETUP
Assigning DMA Channels for ISA Cards
Some ISA cards, both legacy and PnP, may also need to use a DMA (Direct Memory
Access) channel. DMA assignments for this motherboard are handled the same way
as the IRQ assignment process described earlier. You can select a DMA channel in
the PCI and PnP configuration section of the BIOS Setup utility.
IMPORTANT: To avoid conflicts, reserve the necessary IRQs and DMAs for legacy
ISA cards (under PNP AND PCI SETUP of the BIOS SOFTWARE, choose Yes in IRQ
xx Used By ISA and DMA x Used By ISA for those IRQs and DMAs you want to reserve).
Accelerated Graphics Port
This motherboard provides an accelerated graphics port (AGP) slot to support a new
generation of graphics cards with ultra-high memory bandwidth, such as an ASUS
3D hardware accelerator.
0 1
WARNING! Some pins are used for connectors or power sources. These are
clearly separated from jumpers in “Motherboard Layout.” Placing jumper caps
over these will cause damage to your motherboard.
IMPORTANT: Ribbon cables should always be connected with the red stripe on the
Pin 1 side of the connector. The four corners of the connectors are labeled on the
motherboard. Pin 1 is the side closest to the power connector on hard drives and some
floppy drives. IDE ribbon cable must be less than 18 inches (46 cm), with the second
drive connector no more than 6 inches (15 cm) from the first connector.
tected, expansion cards can use IRQ12. See “PS/2 Mouse Control” in BIOS
Connectors
USB 1
Connectors
on the IDE ribbon cable to PIN 1.
PIN 1
Primary IDE Connector
PIN 1
IRRX
IRTX
+5V
GND
(NC)
III. H/W SETUP
Connectors
IRTX +5V
GND (NC)
IRRX
+5 Volt Standby
Ground
PME
PC/PCI Request
Sideband Signal
2 6
DGND Serial IRQ
PC/PCI Grant DGND
Sideband Signal 1 5
SBLINK
0 1
Input
Ground
Ground
Output
MODEM
Pin 1
0 1
2 40
1 39
AMC
Ground
+12V
Rotation
CPU Fan Power
0 1
Keyboard Lock SMI Switch
Message LED System Speaker
GND
GND
GND
Power Switch Reset Switch
IDE LED Power LED
lead. Pushing the button once will switch the system between ON and OFF.
Pushing the switch while in the ON mode for more than 4 seconds will turn the
system off. The system power LED shows the status of the system’s power.
20. IDE Activity LED (2-pin IDELED)
This 2-pin connector supplies power to the cabinet’s IDE activity LED. Read
and write activity by devices connected to the Primary or Secondary IDE con-
nectors will cause the LED to light up.
21. System Power LED Lead (3-1 pin PLED)
This 3-1 pin connector connects the system power LED, which lights when the
system is powered on and blinks when it is in sleep mode.
22. Reset Switch Lead (2-pin RESET)
This 2-pin connector connects to the case-mounted reset switch for rebooting
your computer without having to turn off your power switch This is a preferred
method of rebooting in order to prolong the life of the system’s power supply.
23. Message LED Lead (2-pin MLED)
This indicates whether a message has been received from a fax/modem. The
LED will remain lit when there is no signal and blink when there is data transfer
or messages waiting in the inbox. This function requires ACPI OS support.
24. Keyboard Lock Switch Lead (2-pin KEYLOCK)
This 2-pin connector connects to the case-mounted key switch to allow key-
board locking.
Power Connections
6. The power LED on the front panel of the system case will light. For ATX power
either not programmable or is not supported by the ACPI BIOS and therefore, cannot be
programmed by the Flash Memory Writer utility.
Main Menu
1. Save Current BIOS To File
This option allows you to save a
copy of the original motherboard
BIOS in case you need to reinstall
it. It is recommended that you save
AFLASH.EXE and the BIOS file
to a bootable floppy disk.
WARNING! If you encounter problems while updating the new BIOS, DO NOT
turn off your system since this might prevent your system from booting up. Just
repeat the process, and if the problem still persists, update the original BIOS file
IV. BIOS SETUP
Updating BIOS
you saved to disk above. If the Flash Memory Writer utility was not able to
successfully update a complete BIOS file, your system may not be able to boot
up. If this happens, your system will need service.
BIOS Setup
When you invoke Setup, the CMOS SETUP UTILITY main program screen will
appear with the following options:
The preceding screen provides you with a list of options. At the bottom of this screen
are the control keys for this screen. Take note of these keys and their respective uses.
User-configurable fields appear in a different color. If you need information on the
selected field, press <F1>. The help menu will then appear to provide you with the
information you need. The memory display at the lower right-hand side of the screen
is read-only and automatically adjusts accordingly.
Details of Standard CMOS Setup:
Date
To set the date, highlight the “Date” field and then press either <Page Up>/<Page Down>
or <+>/<–> to set the current date. Follow the month, day and year format. Valid values
for month, day and year are: Month: (1 to 12), Day: (1 to 31), Year: (up to 2079)
Hard Disks
This field records the specifications for all non-SCSI hard disk drives installed in
your system. The onboard PCI IDE connectors provide Primary and Secondary
channels for connecting up to four IDE hard disks or other IDE devices. Each chan-
nel can support up to two hard disks; the first of which is the “master” and the
second is the “slave”.
Specifications for SCSI hard disks need not to be entered here since they operate
using device drivers and are not supported bythe BIOS. If you install other SCSI
controller cards, refer to their respective documentations on how to install the re-
quired SCSI drivers.
For IDE hard disk drive setup, you can:
• Use the Auto setting for detection during bootup.
• Use the IDE HDD AUTO DETECTION in the main menu to automatically
The entries for specifying the hard disk type include CYLS (number of cylinders),
HEAD (number of read/write heads), PRECOMP (write precompensation), LANDZ
(landing zone), SECTOR (number of sectors) and MODE. The SIZE field auto-
matically adjusts according to the configuration you specify. The documentation
that comes with your hard disk should provide you with the information regarding
the drive specifications.
The MODE entry is for IDE hard disks only, and can be ignored for MFM and ESDI
drives. This entry provides three options: Normal, Large, LBA, or Auto (see below).
Set MODE to the Normal for IDE hard disk drives smaller than 528MB; set it to
LBA for drives over 528MB that support Logical Block Addressing (LBA) to allow
larger IDE hard disks; set it to Large for drives over 528MB that do not support
LBA. Large type of drive can only be used with MS-DOS and is very uncommon.
Most IDE drives over 528MB support the LBA mode.
NOTE: After the IDE hard disk drive information has been entered into BIOS, new
IDE hard disk drives must be partitioned (such as with FDISK) and then formatted
before data can be read from and write on. Primary IDE hard disk drives must have
its partition set to active (also possible with FDISK).
NOTE: SETUP Defaults are noted in parenthesis next to each function heading.
Drive A (None)
This field records the type of floppy disk drive installed in your system. The avail-
able options are: 360K, 5.25 in.; 1.2M, 5.25 in.; 720K, 3.5 in.; 1.44M, 3.5 in.; 2.88M,
3.5 in.; None
IV. BIOS SETUP
Standard CMOS
A section at the lower right of the screen displays the control keys you can use. Take
note of these keys and their respective uses. If you need information on a particular
entry, highlight it and then press <F1>. A pop-up help menu will appear to provide
you with the information you need. <F5> loads the last set values, <F6> and <F7>
loads the BIOS default values and Setup default values, respectively.
BIOS Features
Details of BIOS Features Setup
CPU Internal Core Speed
This function is reserved for future use and is currently disabled.
Boot Virus Detection (Enabled)
This field allows you to set boot virus detection, ensuring a virus-free boot sector.
This new antivirus solution is unlike native BIOS tools, which offer limited virus
protection typically by write-protecting the partition table. With this new solution,
your computer is protected against boot virus threats earlier in the boot cycle, that is,
before they have a chance to load into your system. This ensures your computer
boots to a clean operating system. The system halts and displays a warning message
when it detects a virus. If this occurs, you can either allow the operation to continue
or use a virus-free bootable floppy disk to restart and investigate your system. Be-
cause of conflicts with new operating systems, for example, during installation of
new software, you may have to set this to Disabled to prevent write errors.
This field determines where the system looks first for an operating system. Options
BIOS Features
are A,C; C,A; A,CDROM,C; CDROM,C,A; D,A; E,A; F,A; C only; LS/ZIP, C; LAN,A,C;
and LAN,C,A. The setup default setting, A, C, is to check first the floppy disk and then
the hard disk drive.
Boot Up Floppy Seek (Disabled)
When enabled, the BIOS will seek drive A once.
Floppy Disk Access Control (R/W)
This allows protection of files from the computer system to be copied to floppy
disks by allowing the setting of Read Only to only allow reads from the floppy disk
drive but not writes. The setup default R/W allows both reads and writes.
IDE HDD Block Mode Sectors (HDD MAX)
This field enhances hard disk performance by making multi-sector transfers instead
of one sector per transfer. Most IDE drives, except older versions, can utilize this
feature. Selections are HDD MAX, Disabled, 2, 4, 8, 16, and 32.
HDD S.M.A.R.T. capability (Disabled)
This allows the enabling or disabling of the S.M.A.R.T. (Self-Monitoring, Analysis
and Reporting Technology) system which utilizes internal hard disk drive monitor-
ing technology. This feature is normally disabled because system resources used in
this feature may decrease system performance.
NOTE: SETUP Defaults are noted in parenthesis next to each function heading.
This controls the latency between SDRAM read command and the time that the data
actually becomes available. Leave on default setting.
SDRAM RAS to CAS Delay
This controls the latency between SDRAM active command and the read/write com-
mand. Leave on default setting.
SDRAM RAS Precharge Time
This controls the idle clocks after issuing a precharge command to SDRAM. Leave
on default setting.
DRAM Idle Timer
This controls the idle clocks before closing an opened SDRAM page. Leave on
default setting.
SDRAM MA Wait State (Normal)
This controls the leadoff clocks for CPU read cycles. Leave on default setting.
Snoop Ahead (Enabled)
Enabled will allow PCI streaming. Leave on default setting.
Host Bus Fast Data Ready (Disabled)
Leave on default setting.
Chipset Features
IV. BIOS SETUP
If your DIMMs do not have ECC (e.g., 8 chips), they are considered 64 bits and the
following will be displayed instead:
system already has a second serial port connected to the onboard COM2 connector, it
will no longer work if you enable the infrared feature. By default, this field is set to
Disabled, which leaves the second serial port UART to support the COM2 serial port
connector. See IrDA-compliant infrared module connector under section III.
Onboard PCI IDE Enable (Both)
You can select to enable the primary IDE channel, secondary IDE channel, both, or
disable both channels (for systems with only SCSI drives).
IDE Ultra DMA Mode (Auto)
This field autodetects Ultra DMA capability (for improved transfer speeds and data in-
tegrity) for compatible IDE devices. Set to Disable to suppress Ultra DMA capability.
IDE 0 Master/Slave PIO/DMA Mode, IDE 1 Master/Slave PIO/DMA Mode (Auto)
Each channel (0 and 1) has both a master and a slave making four IDE devices
possible. Because each IDE device may have a different Mode timing (0, 1, 2, 3, 4),
it is necessary for these to be independent. The default setting of Auto will allow
autodetection to ensure optimal performance
NOTE: SETUP Defaults are noted in parenthesis next to each function heading.
Power Management
puts the system into power saving mode after a brief period of system inactivity;
Power Management
IV. BIOS SETUP
Automatic Power Up (Disabled)
This allows you to have an unattended or automatic power up of your system. You may
configure your system to power up at a certain time of the day by selecting Everyday,
which will allow you to set the time or at a certain time and day by selecting By Date.
NOTE: SETUP Defaults are noted in parenthesis next to each function heading.
Passwords
IV. BIOS
password when the “Enter Password” prompt appears. A message confirms the
password has been disabled.
Forgot the password?
If you forgot the password, you can clear the password by erasing the CMOS Real
Time Clock (RTC) RAM. The RAM data containing the password information is
powered by the onboard button cell battery. To erase the RTC RAM: (1) Unplug
your computer, (2) Short the solder points, (3) Turn ON your computer, (4) Hold
down <Delete> during bootup and enter BIOS setup to re-enter user preferences.
0 1
RTCCLR
Up to four IDE drives can be detected, with parameters for each listed inside the
box. To accept the optimal entries, press <Y> or else select from the numbers dis-
played under the OPTIONS field (2, 1, 3 in this case); to skip to the next drive, press
<N>. If you accept the values, the parameters will appear listed beside the drive
letter on the screen. The process then proceeds to the next drive letter. Pressing
<N> to skip rather than to accept a set of parameters causes the program to enter
Hard Disk Detect
Remember that if you are using another IDE controller that does not feature En-
hanced IDE support for four devices, you can only install two IDE hard disk drives.
Your IDE controller must support the Enhanced IDE features in order to use Drive E
and Drive F. The onboard PCI IDE controller supports Enhanced IDE, with two
connectors for connecting up to four IDE devices. If you want to use another con-
troller that supports four drives, you must disable the onboard IDE controller in the
Chipset Features Setup screen.
When auto-detection is completed, the program automatically enters all entries you
accepted on the field for that drive in the Standard CMOS Setup screen. Skipped
entries are ignored and are not entered in the screen.
If you are auto-detecting a hard disk that supports the LBA mode, three lines will
appear in the parameter box. Choose the line that lists LBA for an LBA drive. Do
not select Large or Normal.
The auto-detection feature can only detect one set of parameters for a particular IDE
hard drive. Some IDE drives can use more than one set. This is not a problem if the
drive is new and empty.
V. S/W SETUP
Operating Systems
V. S/W SETUP
NOTE: The screen displays in this section may not reflect exactly the screen con-
tents displayed on your screen.
• LDCM Local Setup: Installs software to monitor the local system. The
LANDesk Client Manager must be installed in order to use the hardware man-
ager features.
• LDCM Administrator Setup: Installs software to monitor PC systems on the
network within the same bridge address with the Local software installed. The
administrator should install both Local and Administrator Software.
• Adobe Acrobat Reader: Installs the Adobe Acrobat Reader software necessary
to view the LDCM manual in the LDCM directory.
V. S/W SETUP
• Install Video Driver and Utility: Installs the video driver and utilities for the
Windows 98
1. Click here.
V. S/W SETUP
Windows 98
1. Click here.
2. Click here.
1. Click here.
2. Click here.
5. Click here.
Windows 98
Contents
Using the CD Playlist ............................................................ 69
Creative MIDI Player .................................................................. 70
Using the MIDI Playlist ......................................................... 70
Creative Remote .......................................................................... 71
Creative Wave Player .................................................................. 72
SB AudioPCI 64V Mixer ............................................................ 73
Real-Time Effects .................................................................. 73
Creative WaveStudio ................................................................... 74
ATI Player ......................................................................................... 75
Features ....................................................................................... 75
Playing Audio CDs (Only in window 95) ................................... 76
Playing Media Files ..................................................................... 77
Playing Interactive Discs (Video CD 2.0) ............................. 77
Desktop Management Interface (DMI) ............................................. 78
Introducing the ASUS DMI Configuration Utility ................ 78
Starting the ASUS DMI Configuration Utility ...................... 78
Using the ASUS DMI Configuration Utility ......................... 79
ASUS PCI-L101 Fast Ethernet Card ................................................ 81
Features ............................................................................................. 82
Software Driver Support ............................................................. 82
Question and Answer .................................................................. 82
Common operations
Tracks Playlist
Volume
NOTE: The terms "track" and "file" are used interchangeably throughout this section.
Enter CD Title
Displays sequence of Displays all the
tracks to be played tracks on the CD
Creative MIDI is the player in the Multimedia Decks suite of players that lets you
play MIDI files. It also has some advanced features which include:
• Ability to be controlled by the Creative Remote
• OLE Automation support
• Plug and Play support
• Power management support
• "Touch-sensitive" display
• Multiple display forms
• Fine control of a track's playing position
• Introduction Mode, Repeat Playlist Mode, Repeat Track Mode and Shuffle Mode
for playback
• Playlist compilation of different MIDI files
• Fast track selection
• Direct volume control for multiple sound cards
Stop Play Pause
Select a collection
(a saved playlist) Adds the selected
tracks in the File list
Displays the Playlist to the Playlist
(a sequence of the
tracks to be played)
Displays the files in
the current directory
Selects the directory, path,
and type of files to be
Displays the directory displayed in the File list
of the file selected
Enter artist name
Enter track notes
Creative Remote
Creative Remote is the main component of the Creative Multimedia Decks group of
players. Like a home remote control, it lets you control different Creative Multime-
dia Decks players from a single control interface. If you require more control over a
player, you can also invoke the player from Creative Remote.
In addition, it consists of several advanced features like:
• Ability to launch any of the available Creative Multimedia Decks players for
more direct control over a device
• "Touch-sensitive" display
• Multiple display forms
• Fast track selection
• Color scheme selection
Invoke player
Starts recording
Creative Wave is the player in the Creative Multimedia Decks suite of players that
lets you play wave files. It also has some advanced features which include:
• Ability to be controlled by the Creative Remote
• OLE Automation support
• Plug and Play support
• Power management support
• "Touch-sensitive" display
• Multiple display forms
• Fine control of a track's playing position
• Introduction Mode, Repeat Playlist Mode, Repeat Track Mode and Shuffle Mode
for playback
• Playlist compilation of different wave files
• Fast track selection
• Direct volume control for multiple sound cards
Audio Mixer
dates some features found on the AudioPCI card. These features are unavailable
through the Windows 95/98 mixer.
Real-Time Effects
AudioPCI supports real-time effects. In addition to the effects described below, more
effects may be available in the future.
This effect provides a surround-sound effect. There is a drop-down box on
the device panel that will allow you to switch between the three different
spatial presets: Off, On, and Wide. By default this switch is set to Off.
The reverb effect will make the MIDI instruments on the card sound as if
they were playing in a large concert hall or stadium. The three degrees of
reverb provided are Off, On, and Full. This effect can be applied to the Syn-
thesizer device.
The chorus effect will add depth to the card’s synthesizer sounds. The three
settings for chorus are Off, On, and Full. This effect can be applied to the
Synthesizer device. NOTE: Chorus is a special effect, which should be used
with discretion; it is generally not recommended to leave the chorus effect
enabled at all times.
ATI Player
If VIDEO drivers are installed, for playing video clips, the ATI Player icon will
appear in the DeskTop. Double click on this icon to bring up the Video Screen as
shown here: (Detailed button definitions are shown when holding the cursor over
the individual buttons for a few seconds.)
The Task Control Panel
The Task control panel indicates what mode the player is in and what it’s doing.
(Your Task control panel may not look exactly like the illustration-only installed or
available features will have controls.)
Windows 95/3.x
C. ATI Player
PAL/NTSC
Features
The question mark on top right of the Video Screen allows inspection into each
button on the control panel. Click on the “?” then on a button that you would like to
know about.
Click the Audio CD button in the Task control panel to switch to Audio CD mode
Random Position
Loop Play Slider Eject Setup
Stop Pause Intro Track Skip Skip Track Time Time Volume Volume
Play Down Back Forward Up Mode Display Control Mute
The Audio CD player has its own control panel for controlling the audio CD playback.
You can use the Audio CD panel to play standard audio CDs. Advanced features
such as Random play, Intro play, which plays the first ten seconds of each track, and
Loop play are available.
To play an audio CD
1. Insert the audio CD into your CD-ROM drive.
2. In the Audio CD panel, click the Setup Dialogs button .
3. Click the Disc Info tab.
4. From the Available Tracks list, add or remove tracks as desired.
The Play List displays your current selections.
5. Click OK.
6. In the Audio CD panel, click the Play button .
The Audio CD player uses Windows 95 standard INI file to store disc names, track
names, and the play list. You can use the Setup dialog to enter the name of the artist
and the disc.
When playing Video CD 2.0 discs, the Control panel changes to this interactive
panel.
ASUS MEB-VM User’s Manual 75
VI. SOFTWARE REFERENCE
VI. S/W REFERENCE
This motherboard supports DMI within the BIOS level and provides a DMI Con-
figuration Utility to maintain the Management Information Format Database (MIFD).
DMI is able to auto-detect and record information pertinent to a computer’s system
such as the CPU type, CPU speed, and internal/external frequencies, and memory
size. The onboard BIOS will detect as many system information as possible and
store those collected information in a 4KB block in the motherboard’s Flash EPROM
and allow the DMI to retrieve data from this database. Unlike other BIOS software,
the BIOS on this motherboard uses the same technology implemented for Plug and
Play to allow dynamic real-time updating of DMI information versus creating a new
BIOS image file and requiring the user to update the whole BIOS. This DMI Con-
figuration Utility also allows the system integrator or end user to add additional
information into the MIFD such as serial numbers, housing configurations, and ven-
dor information. Those information not detected by the motherboard BIOS and has
to be manually entered through the DMI Configuration Utility and updated into the
MIFD. This DMI Configuration Utility provides the same reliability as PnP updat-
ing and will prevent the refreshing failures associated with updating the entire BIOS.
DIM Utility
reflect the screen contents on your system.
Use the ←→ (left-right) cursors to move the top menu items and the ↑↓ (up-down)
cursor to move between the left hand menu items. The bottom of the screen will
show the available keys for each screen. Press enter at the menu item to enter the
right hand screen for editing. “Edit component” appears on top. The reversed color
field is the current cursor position and the blue text are available for editing. The
orange text shows auto-detected information and are not available for editing. The
blue text “Press [ENTER] for detail” contains a second pop-up menu is available,
use the + - (plus-minus) keys to change the settings. Enter to exit and save, ESC to
exit and not save.
If the user has made changes, ESC will prompt you to answer Y or N. Enter Y to go
back to the left-hand screen and save, enter N to go back to left-hand screen and not
save. If editing has not been made, ESC will send you back to the left hand menu
without any messages.
Notes
A heading, *** BIOS Auto Detect ***, appears on the right for each menu item on
the left side that has been auto detected by the system BIOS.
A heading, *** User Modified ***, will appear on the right for menu items that
have been modified by the user.
Save MIFD
DMI Utility
You can save the MIFD (normally only saved to flash ROM) to a file by entering the
drive and path here. If you want to cancel save, you may press ESC and a message
“Bad File Name” appears here to show it was not saved.
Load MIFD
You can load the disk file to memory by entering a drive and path and file name
here.
Load BIOS Defaults
You can load the BIOS defaults from a MIFD file and can clear all user modified
and added data. You must reboot your computer in order for the defaults to be saved
back into the Flash BIOS.
Intel
Chipset
RJ45
ASUS
Wake on LAN
Output Signal Motherboard type
Other
If you are using the ASUS PCI-L101 on an ASUS motherboard, leave the jumper on
its defaut setting of “ASUS.” If you are using another brand of motherboard, set the
jumper to “Other.” Connect the Wake on LAN (WOL) output signal to the
motherboard’s WOL_CON in order to utilize the wake on LAN feature of the moth-
erboard. Connect the LAN activity output signal (LAN_LED) to the system cabinet’s
front panel LAN_LED in order to display the LAN data activity.
• Adheres to PCI Bus Power Management Interface Rev. 1.0, ACPI Rev. 1.0, and
Device Class Power Management Rev. 1.0
• IEEE 802.3u auto-negotiation for 10Mbps/100Mbps Network Data Transfer
Rates.
• Provides LED indicators for monitoring network conditions
• Plug and Play