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Full Version: What's your take about MB drivers.
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Hmm, more like a discussion well just a thought, should motherboard makers gear towards from having the traditional CDrom drivers to a portable USB thumbdrive? I mean look at it.. majority of the DIY customers, I doubt they will install any CDrom or DVD or BlueRay or etc device on their rigs. Games these days are downloaded ... and what end users or gamers need are just the reg key. I believe most have already witness that case builders themselves are going towards a bay-less design. where you don't get to see any 3.25" or 5.25" bay at all. well some might even argue that the driver is useless, most will get it from downloads. well while I was installing windows 10 on a ASrock mobo, the OS was installed without an issue, but there are no drivers for the Intel I219-V Ethernet. I am not able to download the driver online as I have no connection.. well am lucky to have a laptop to download that driver, but what if I do not have one? hmm.. even though drivers that comes with your purchase might be useless, due to the fact that they are outdated and we might just throw the CDrom away. We if it's of a thumbdrive, at least we will reformat it and to reuse it again. 1st it will not be a waste 2nd Branding for mobo companies.. "marketing strategy" well what's your take?
Changed my 6 year old sharkoon t28 casing to fractal design meshify c with no cd drivers without a single consideration. Think cd era is over already
ItsmeagainhK wrote: Changed my 6 year old sharkoon t28 casing to factual design mesfify c with no cd drivers without a single consideration. Think cd era is over already precisely.. thats why I find it no point for MB makers to give us the CD rom lol
KleoZy wrote: precisely.. thats why I find it no point for MB makers to give us the CD rom lol Maybe the older gen will still prefer cd. Then again, if they can diy a pc, pretty sure they can just go online to find the drivers...
Thumbdrive expensive. CD cheap. And nowadays even handphone can download driver and connect via USB... Or use the handphone as wireless lan. Unless you use iphone, in which case you are an idiot.
Rewind back to year 1995 You have to copy the cd-rom driver from the floppy disk and load it if you want to use the cd-rom to install Windows 95
wwenze wrote: Thumbdrive expensive. CD cheap. And nowadays even handphone can download driver and connect via USB... Or use the handphone as wireless lan. Unless you use iphone, in which case you are an idiot. lol... your quote super cute.. I like it lol.. ya I do understand there are ways and means.. I mean usb thumbdrive are more expensive but as a reputable mobo company.. that cost I think should be peanuts for them. hmm, coming from a MNC company.. I believe they spend more more on advertisement and marketing as such. A 2GB thumbdrive as a marketing gimmick, I think is peanuts for them hmm.. oh well... .. the cost might be higher but what does a 2gb thumbdrive cost them if doing in bulks..? in some reputable MNC companies (not talking about mobo company), they simply give away thumbdrives to their staff. i had mine like 2gb, 4gb and sometimes 8GB.. can tell these thumbdrives are of cheap material even with the company logo on them, but still usable..
wwenze wrote: Rewind back to year 1995 You have to copy the cd-rom driver from the floppy disk and load it if you want to use the cd-rom to install Windows 95 this i do agree. a pain in the #sS lol.. well at least now can copy to USB thumbdrive when doing raid ^_^v ... oh well. I guess it should be in no time that these motherboard makers will have to switch in some points.. is just like back in the Win 3.1 days... where you need 8 to 10 3.5" floppy disk to install one stupid HP printer lol..
You can get a USB DVD drive for less than $40.
The day USB drive replace driver CDROM will not arrive within 5 years or we might not even see this day. A master stampler can last 5k to 10K disc, at 1200 discs per hour, the cost is less than 50 cents. No matter how cheap and fast the USB drive can be produce, you can't match the 3 seconds per disc speed of CD
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