XP Service Pack 2 Breaks FireWire 55
Diluted writes "FireWire Depot is reporting about a problem with Service Pack 2 for Windows XP. Apparently not liking the competition from 1394b, Microsoft decided to limit S800 devices to a quarter of their speed capability."
Fixed? (Score:2, Interesting)
Yes, it was. (Score:3)
This is old news. Next!
Re:Who uses FireWire, anyway? (Score:2)
Re:Who uses FireWire, anyway? (Score:2)
Seriously, though, digital camcorders make up the bulk of firewire-connected electronic devices. Why hamstring their performance under the auspices of a service pack? I'm sure the fix makes other things speedier while firewire transfers are going on, but at the expense of the transfer itself? Why?
Re:Who uses FireWire, anyway? (Score:2)
If you're not one of the poor saps whose laptop has a 4-pin 1394 port, you also really notice not having to carry a power cord and wall wart for your external hard drive everywhere with you.
Re:Who uses FireWire, anyway? (Score:1)
Re:Who uses FireWire, anyway? (Score:1)
Re:Who uses FireWire, anyway? (Score:1)
Re:Who uses FireWire, anyway? (Score:2)
What the...? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What the...? (Score:1)
Whenever Redmond is found to have broken something, it's usually a competitor's product. And now it is being reported that 1394b is slowed down because of XP SP2. I'm guessing that Slashdot's filters discarded the <sarcasm> tags.
Re:What the...? (Score:1)
Actually the OP was serious, in another post he equates Apple involvement in Firewire and Intel involvement in USB as reason enough for Microsoft to consider Firewire "competition". Never mind the fact that they address two completely different usage profiles. When's the last time you saw a Firewire PC keyboard, or a consumer DV camera with USB-based video transfer?
Lets time-shift a bit and look for a theoretical scenario in the past that would be similar to today's situation to see if it makes any sens
Re:What the...? (Score:2)
Re:What the...? (Score:1)
Re:What the...? (Score:3, Interesting)
I actually had somebody give me shit a couple of weeks ago denying a statement I made about Slashdot sensationalizing MS news stories.
At least they have a solution (Score:1)
Huh? (Score:3, Insightful)
Since when did Microsoft compete with FireWire? The only real competition to 1394 is USB, and that's an Intel technolog.
That, and Microsoft has already released a patch.
well.... (Score:1)
Re:well.... (Score:2)
Re:well.... (Score:1)
Re:Article: -1, Troll (Score:1)
I love how the only observant post on this page was modded troll.
Fixed with patch (Score:5, Informative)
Patch? Fix? (Score:2, Informative)
As far as the competition angle... USB is intel's protocol, firewire is largely driven by apple... that was my point about competition.
The real issue here is taht Ms's monopoly allows them to crush a protocol if they so desire.
Re:Patch? Fix? (Score:1)
Dude, take off that shiny metal headgear. Why would Microsoft exert influence on a standard that doesn't affect their bottom line? You've pulled this out of your ass, ever considered a career in celebrity 'news'???
Re:Patch? Fix? (Score:1)
Maybe it is conspiratorial of me to make that suggestion but really... why else would they do it? I can't think of any security or stability reasons, unless their handling of S800 devices is so terrible that it can't keep up.
The only plausible reason in my mind is that Microsoft has some sort of problem with 1394 and because they have the market share to do so, they are able to cripple it into non-usefulness.
Re:Patch? Fix? (Score:2)
Yeah, because you know, mistakes never ever happen, and Microsoft never ever ships bugs they didn't mean to put in their software in the first place.
Stupid jackass.
Could someone clarify? Registry hack or patch? (Score:5, Informative)
I thought the problem with Firewire was resolved with a patch [microsoft.com]. But the resolution also mentions a Registry hack.
However, the Download page does not mention any registry hack [microsoft.com].
Is this problem fixed by the patch, or by a registry hack? Either? Both? Neither?
Re:Could someone clarify? Registry hack or patch? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Could someone clarify? Registry hack or patch? (Score:2)
Thank you.
Re:Patch? Fix? (Score:2, Interesting)
Now thing might change a little with wireless USB, bluetooth, etc,.. but a company is always going to back a technology more when they played a role or invested something into its creation.
Re:Patch? Fix? (Score:2)
Why do I have the feeling that if the little line about MS not liking the competition wasn't in the article, it wouldn't have been posted?
Why are you complaining now? (Score:2, Insightful)
And you just noticed that Firewire was broken?
Why are some people just starting to complain NOW, months after SP2 has been released?
For the record, I haven't had any noticable problems with SP2. It works fine for me.
Some of our developers had problems, but that's because they weren't smart enough to to deal with the integrated firewall. They were complaining when *spyware* was attempting to establish an outside connection.
Also for the record, I'm not the w
Re:Why are you complaining now? (Score:2)
Most PCs, if they have Firewire at all, have FW400 (the original).
Re:Why are you complaining now? (Score:2)
Re:Why are you complaining now? (Score:2)
and this is news? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:and this is news? (Score:2)
Re:and this is news? (Score:2)
so why would sp2 even touch that registry entry then???
Re:and this is news? (Score:2)
Re:and this is news? (Score:1)
Re:and this is news? (Score:2)
News Flash! (Score:2)
Already patched, KB Article here. (Score:2, Redundant)
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/885222 [microsoft.com]
Re:Already patched, KB Article here. (Score:2)
Microsoft Windows XP updates are harmful. (Score:2)
Now they have to use SP2. Say goodbye to canon multipass... Canon refuses to fix drivers.
Re:Microsoft Windows XP updates are harmful. (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.canon.com.au/support/customer/default.a sp?DXI=KnowledgeBase/Customer/KBArticleForm&File=K B01347&productID=mpc190 [canon.com.au]
Did you really check with Canon whether they were going to fix this?
Re:Microsoft Windows XP updates are harmful. (Score:2)
device-id's get messed up if you hotplug disks (Score:2)
I have 2 FW devices: a canopus media bridge (advc 100 - converts analog video to FW/dv) and a regular old external FW disk (ide bridge inside).
plug one in, wait till its seen, then plug the other one in. both are seen.
do some video capture to the external FW drive. works fine.
unplug the camera. leave the drive connected.
oops! drive goes from NTFS to 'raw' and loses its 'letter'.
have to reset the whole thing to get the drive to be seen again.
buggy buggy buggy. sigh.
That's painful... (Score:2)
That's painful. The last S100 bus system I had only ran at 6MHz, and only had 64kb of RAM. But hey, those dual 8" floppy SSDD disk drives were schweet!
Found a Problem? (Score:1)
Peek into the Future:
Year 2025 - It's been reported that Microsoft's Windows XP SP2 has broken...THE SAN ANDRES FAULT. In-depth coverage at 11!