What do I gain by installing the chip set drivers?

Anomaly

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Right now I am running Windows 7 with the default windows drivers for the chip set. I have run a driver up date program and it tells me that the chip set needs a driver update. I know I was running the Windows driver not the manufacturer's driver but everything seems to be running very well so what is the advantage of installing the driver from the manufacturer? It lists Intel(R) 82801 GBM/GHM (ICH7-M Family) Serial ATA Storage Controller 27C4 as the driver.
 

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hi Anomaly. Personally I wouldn't install the chipset drivers if you are happy with things the way they are. Microsoft worked very hard to get working drivers into Windows 7 and I am of the belief that apart from Graphic drivers they should be left as they are where possible.

I expect other members will disagree but that is just my $0.02
 

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If there's a chipset driver available from your computer manufacturer's site, chances are it has been modified specifically for the hardware in your computer. Getting windows to utilize it instead of the default generic chipset driver that came with windows 7 is probably going to be more of a hassle than it's worth, however
 
If there are chipset drivers available from your manufacturer I would almost certainly use them over the generic Windows ones.

There's no harm in trying them out at least, you can always roll back the driver if you don't like it or if there are performance issues.

A good way to compare a generic chipset driver to specialised chipset driver is to run your Windows Experience index score before and after and look for any differences.

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/79177-windows-experience-index-reset.html.

Oli
 

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OK thanks for the responses. If it isn't broke don't fix it :cool:
 

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Windows 7
OK thanks for the responses. If it isn't broke don't fix it :cool:

That's one philosophy to work by but if everyone worked by that stature there would be no computers ;).

'If it's being held back by anything more than the laws of physics we need to stop that' is a philosophy being used a lot these days by IT firms.

Oli
 

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If there are chipset drivers available from your manufacturer I would almost certainly use them over the generic Windows ones.

There's no harm in trying them out at least, you can always roll back the driver if you don't like it or if there are performance issues.

A good way to compare a generic chipset driver to specialised chipset driver is to run your Windows Experience index score before and after and look for any differences.

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/79177-windows-experience-index-reset.html.

Oli

The chip set driver isn't from the computer manufacturer it's from Intel. My computer is a Dell laptop and on the Dell site there are NO Windows 7 drivers for my laptop just Vista ones. I think that the Vista ones would work from what i have read but I might need to install them in compatibility mode.
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7
If there are chipset drivers available from your manufacturer I would almost certainly use them over the generic Windows ones.

There's no harm in trying them out at least, you can always roll back the driver if you don't like it or if there are performance issues.

A good way to compare a generic chipset driver to specialised chipset driver is to run your Windows Experience index score before and after and look for any differences.

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/79177-windows-experience-index-reset.html.

Oli

The chip set driver isn't from the computer manufacturer it's from Intel. My computer is a Dell laptop and on the Dell site there are NO Windows 7 drivers for my laptop just Vista ones. I think that the Vista ones would work from what i have read but I might need to install them in compatibility mode.

The chances are that you won't have to install them in compatibility mode if they are Vista drivers.

Vista drivers and Seven drivers are interchangeable for almost everything.

You only need compatibility mode if something doesn't work during installation.

Oli
 

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Apple MacBook 5,1
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Windows 7 Profesional x86, Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard
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Intel Core 2 Duo 2.4Ghz
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4GB DDR3
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Nvidia 9400m
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13.3" Internal + 22" DVI + 21.5" USB
Screen Resolution
1280x800 + 1920x1080 + 1920x1080
Hard Drives
Internal SATA 2.5" 500GB (395GB Mac HFS+, 105GB Windows NTFS)
2.48TB RAID consisting of 5 disks (HFS+)
Case
Aluminium Unibody
Keyboard
Apple Late 2009 Wireless Keyboard (US)
Mouse
Apple Magic Mouse
Internet Speed
6.33Mb/s up. 0.36Mb/s down.
Other Info
Harman Kardon Soundsticks II Speakers
I've had a bit of experience with installing windows 7 on older dell computers that aren't supported for 7. The chipset drivers for vista are older than the default drivers and won't install unless you force them, and probably won't make much of a difference. But you can always try. My preference is that if everything is working and there are no unknown devices in Device Manager, I'm not going to waste any more time searching for drivers.
 
hi Anomaly. Personally I wouldn't install the chipset drivers if you are happy with things the way they are. Microsoft worked very hard to get working drivers into Windows 7 and I am of the belief that apart from Graphic drivers they should be left as they are where possible.

I expect other members will disagree but that is just my $0.02

About the Graphics driver. When I first installed Windows 7 I didn't have aero or some of the other advanced graphics features of 7 and I knew that was because I needed a driver for my video card. I checked Windows update and it was listed there under the optional updates. I let it install and it works great. So maybe Windows doesn't have a generic driver for you but it found the proper one for me so it worked out.

When I decided to install Windows 7 on this machine I though I was going to be in for a big hassle when it came to drivers. The machine is about 4 years old and Dell has no drivers on the web site for Windows 7 on this machine. Turns out the whole thing was a breeze. After install everything worked except the advanced graphics and windows found that driver for me. My touchpad needed a driver and I found that at Synaptics no problem. Couldn't be happier with the install process it was as easy as my Macs and much less problem than XP.

There is an update for my wireless but I have always let windows handle my wireless. Intel's drivers are more hassle than they are worth. They install about 10 processes just to run the wireless card. I have always just disabled them and used Windows wireless and never have issue.
 

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OS
Windows 7
Most of the older computers (4-6 yrs) that I've worked with in the past few months aren't supported by the manufacturer for 7 and sometimes not even for vista but they worked fine after being updated
 
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