Official to the end of 2009, however as one of the Alwil team expressed his own opinion that he believes 4.8 will be supported for 6-12 months ‘after’ avast 5.0 is officially released.
So that would by association mean win98 would effectively be supported for the same period.
Let me count the ways:
Its an AMD Duron processor and I can’t find the correct video driver for it so its stuck at 640x480 resolution.
It has Realtek audio but I can’t get the audio to work even with the latest AC’ 97 driver
I even tried to update it to WinME with the same result but at least it found the Realtek NIC so I can connect to the Internet.
When support ends for avast! I switch the system to Clamwin and have to make sure she updates it at least dayly and run a scan.
Also, I/we need to get some additional hardware specs from you. Please download and install this utility and see if it will tell you the various devices, including your graphics chipset. If you post back with a report, we can help you out finding drivers if you need it. Also, is this a whitebox or is it from Dell/HP/Compaq/Gateway, etc.? If so, what is the “make and model” of the system?
I installed Belarc Advisor (Everest is not free ) and found that the system is a Gigabyte KM133 800MHZ so now I have 1024x768 graphics but still no sound.
I think it may be a Wireless adapter that is detected as a Realtek adapter as I have disabled all Realtek adapters in the BIOS.
I am going to remove it but I have to find a protector as I don’t want to leave the case open.
Is there a yellow exclamation point next to the sound card/chipset in the device manager? It’s possible that the chipset requires a more specific driver than what the generic AC’97 will cover.
ardvark,sweetie…I have been using Everest for a number of years and just recently found out that the CPU Temp controls are way off. Everest temps are much lower than what is really there. Check with your Bios screen.
Could you open the case, grab a flashlight and look for a model number printed on the board? Sometimes (at least with ASUS boards) they’ll put a sticker on or near the ports too (like the parallel port).
Or is it an add-in audio card (plugged into a PCI slot). If so, then the easiest way to find drivers for that is to turn off the computer, UNPLUG IT, remove the card, and look for identifying numbers on it. It might say clearly, or there will be a couple sets of random crap. google searching each one should help narrow it down. Then we can go to the manufacturers website to find the driver.