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RE: available slots
Sagit,
So much marketing hype, I wouldn't know where to
begin. I would be hard pressed to believe that
you are in Jungo's engineering organization, rather
than in a marketing capacity.
The issue is not whether *Windows* boots on the 'remote'
machine, but whether *anything* boots. Without that,
your software-based WinDriver is simply not helpful.
Please pay closer attention to the problem statement,
instead of using such opportunities as a thinly-veiled
sales pitch. Or, you could post this stuff on pci-com.
I'm sure that Jungo has some very interesting products.
I've looked at some of your stuff, as I'm sure others
have. To characterize your tools as 'free' in this
context is misleading, as I've been led to believe
that your WinDriver wizard produces code which is
dependent on (IMO) expen$sive proprietary libraries.
Thanks,
-- DaveN
-----Original Message-----
From: Sagit Kaniel [mailto:sagit@jungo.com]
Sent: Sunday, December 03, 2000 8:46 AM
To: Patrick Maupin; pci-sig@znyx.com
Cc: pci-sig@znyx.com
Subject: Re: available slots
Pat, David,
>That tool is probably great for anybody whose hardware works
>well enough for Windows to actually boot.
This tool does not support only Windows (9x, NT, NT, NT Embedded,2000, CE,
ME) O.S.,
but also Linux, Solaris, VxWorks and OS/2. The code created using WinDriver
will be source compatible between all supported O.S. - just re-compile.
>It also might be good for David, if he were asking for a tool to examine
a PC,
>rather than a way for _his_ application to automatically examine
>PCI slots on any arbitrary user machine.
Not at all. This tool includes Remote WinDriver, which enables you to plug
the hardware on a remote target machine, running one of the operating
systems supported by WinDriver, and to access it from your host development
workstation in any location.
Using the WinDriver Remote Wizard (Included in Remote WinDriver), you can
auto-detect all the hardware that is plugged into the remote target machine.
The Remote Access Wizard enables you to test and diagnose the hardware from
the host machine by reading and writing to the I/O and memory mapped
ranges, listening to interrupts, and defining registers. The wizard also
allows the remote detection and testing of USB devices, listening to
device's pipes and sending set-up packets to control pipe of the remote
target device.
After verifying the hardware functions as expected, the WinDriver Remote
Wizard automatically generates the driver source code for the target
device. The library of API generated by the Wizard is specifically suited
to the specific target hardware
Remote WinDriver saves the need to plug the hardware to the host machine,
using adapters and converters, or developing the driver on the embedded
machine, using non-convenient and non-familiar tools.
For more information please see - http://www.jungo.com/rawindriver.html
Sagit
At 08:57 AM 11/30/00 -0600, Patrick Maupin wrote:
>That tool is probably great for anybody whose hardware works
>well enough for Windows to actually boot. It also might be
>good for David, if he were asking for a tool to examine a PC,
>rather than a way for _his_ application to automatically examine
>PCI slots on any arbitrary user machine.
>
>Pat
>
>
> > Hardware debugger - a tool enables you to access your hardware (PCI /
> > ISA / USB /ISA PnP/EISA/PCMCIA) in seconds using a graphical
> > application. It is a 'Point & Click' application, which enables you to
> > diagnose your hardware before writing a single line of code.
> > Using this tool you can read and write to memory and I/O ranges,
> > listen to interrupts, define registers and access them.
> >
> > For more information see -
> > http://www.jungo.com/products.html
> > http://www.jungo.com/products-wdwizard.html
> >
> > You can download it for free from http://www.jungo.com/dnload.html
> > To try out the Wizard, download WinDriver, and choose 'Driver Wizard'
> > from '/START MENU/PROGRAMS/WinDriver'
> >
> > Sagit
> >
> >
>
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------
> >
> > At 09:29 PM 11/26/00 -0600, David Huebel wrote:
> >
> > > Does someone know of a way from a Windows app or a driver to
> > > determine if there are available PCI slots?
> > >
> > > David
> > >
>
>--
>Patrick Maupin
>5216 Crooked Oak Cove
>Austin, Texas 78749
>512 891 6037