I have searched the forums well enough (I think - someone might prove me wrong), and I found a handful of threads about Windows 2003 (none of them containing "USB" - but since the search is kind of limited to 4-letter words...)
I'm having a problem with EVERY VERSION of any kind of nForce driver packages. The problem is: I have a nForce-4 SLI-F-based motherboard (MSI K8N SLI, to be exact), and it features USB Hi-Speed devices (USB 2.0). However, I am unable to enable USB 2.0 support in the system.
From one other thread I've googled here from (yes, I used google!), I found this:
Quote:
"Installation Notes
Windows XP users must install Service Pack 1 prior to attempting to install this package. Failure to do so will result in the inability to support USB 2.0."
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This is exactly the problem, even though it WAS the problem for Windows XP - Windows XP was released before USB 2.0-compliant hardware was present and tested, therefore the support for those devices has been added in SP1, as we can find out here:
http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/system...intro.mspx#EBB
Quote:
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"Windows 2000 and Windows XP were released before USB 2.0 hardware was available, so the drivers were released for those operating systems in the service packs."
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My problem is this: whenever I install the nForce drivers, I get a small dialog box saying that USB 2.0 is available after installing Service Pack 1 for Windows XP.
The problem is: I'm running Windows Server 2003 (Enterprise). I've tried Service Pack 1, but it doesn't help (the dialog box still pops up). So, apart from finding a way to force Service Pack 1 for Windows XP onto Windows Server 2003, is there a way to enable USB 2.0 support? (Theoretically Windows 2003 supports USB 2.0 'out-of-the-box', without the need for any service packs; and don't ask why I'm running 2k3 on a standard desktop - it's a little project I have underway @ my workplace - I figured since we had one license laying around...

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Heh, and to think that certain apps don't recognize Windows 2003 (they say I either need 98/2000/ME/XP [while 2k3 is compatible]) and You have to modify .msi files, the wrong programs DO identify it as an XP-based kernel and f*ck up... (You can get pretty iritated after a loooong operation of copying 1 GB of data from a USB hdd on USB 1.1...)
Which millenium were we living in, again?