Tuesday, July 30th 2013
The World's First Microsoft Windows 8.1 Certified Motherboard - MSI Z87-G43
MSI, the leading motherboard manufacturer announced today that the Z87-G43 has passed Microsoft Windows 8.1 official certification requirements! MSI Z87-G43 is the World's First motherboard completely compliant with Microsoft Windows 8.1, other MSI motherboards will soon follow in its footsteps. Not only bringing the best user experience, but also standing proof for the skill and dedication of MSI's R&D team. If you want to enjoy the full benefits of Microsoft's latest operating system, MSI motherboards are your best choice.
31 Comments on The World's First Microsoft Windows 8.1 Certified Motherboard - MSI Z87-G43
www.techpowerup.com/187563/asus-z87-c-first-motherboard-whql-certified-for-windows-8-1.html
Or am I missing something? :confused:
If this is completely compliant, does this mean the integrated graphics support dx11.1?
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/hardware/hh748188.aspx
Games for Windows Live is another Microsoft certification and it has very stringent standards:
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ee417691(v=vs.85).aspx
This isn't big news, since the driver model(AFAIK) is identical to Win8, any piece of hardware that worked with 8 will work with 8.1. WHQL certification is nothing more than a smokescreen to make people feel better about drivers. It was a fiasco because even Microsoft couldn't keep straight what the two meant and what the difference between the two were.
Bus Controllers|Requirements for supporting I2C and UART Bus Controllers. For implementation details see requirements under Device.BusControllers.
Fingerprint Reader|Inbox support for fingerprint readers is being introduced in Windows 8.1. In order for fingerprint readers to work properly with Windows 8.1, it is recommended to use the Windows 8.1 class driver. For more information see Device.Input.FingerPrintReader.
Graphics Adapter|For Windows 8.1 all GPU's are required to have WDDM 1.3 driver which improve power management and performance.
Hard Drive|SATA Hybrid hard drives (as defined when the flash cache portion and the rotational component are in the same case) support is being added to Windows 8.1. For more details, see requirement under Device.Storage.Hd.Sata.
Near Field Proximity|NCI, a transport-independent communication protocol that standardizes the way a NFC controller and a device host, compliance is now required for Windows 8.1.
Precision Touchpad|Precision Touchpad is being introduced as a new product for Windows 8.1 Certification. In order for Precision Touchpads to function in Windows 8.1, they must meet the new requirements and exclusively utilized the Windows 8.1 class driver. Precisions Touchpads are required on all ARM based systems and are optional for x86/x64.
Video Playback|Video and audio playback requirements for both connected and non-connected standby systems (if implemented) to ensure glitch free video play of many common video formats. Exact requirements are under System.Client.VideoPlayback.
WLAN|Adding certification requirements to support 802.11ac, and to improve device/driver stability.
The following set of changes will be enforced after January 1, 2014:
Audio|New communication fidelity (InAir) requirement for integrated speakers and microphone to ensure a great voice and video communication experience. See requirements under Device.Audio and System.Fundamentals.SystemAudio.
Bluetooth|In Windows 8.1, to ensure a uniform experience across Windows PCs with an integrated display with wireless capabilities, Bluetooth radio support is required if Wi-Fi is present on the PC beginning with new system submissions starting January 1, 2014.
Connected Standby Power|There are two new requirements beginning January 1, 2014. First in order to support all day usage for connected standby systems, these systems must support at least 6 hours of video playback at the displays native resolution. In addition, if these systems have a fan for a cooling, we need the fan to report its status to the Windows Operating system. Please see requirements under System.Client.PowerManagement and System.Fundamentals.PowerManagement for details.
Webcam|Starting with new system submissions on January 1, 2014, systems that have an integrated display must have a front/user facing webcam with a minimum resolution of 720p. For complete details see the requirements under the feature System.Client.Webcam.
The following requirements will be enforced after January 1, 2015:
Trusted Platform Module (TPM) 2.0|TPM 2.0 required to support PCR [7] in system firmware. All new systems submitting after January 1, 2015 must have TPM 2.0.
See windows8-1-hardware-cert-requirements-system.pdf for all 276 pages of the 8.1 preview system specifications.
What's it matter if no games will use it anyway, for the next 4-5 years?
Obvious answer:
It doesn't matter so imho neither does windows 8.
It's just an OS made for the ipad generation, that loves to throw their money away.
If they want to spend 600 dollars every few months on a new phone, have at it.
Some of us actually like to keep the money we work for and spend it on things, that are actually better, than what we already have.
So I'm pretty confident that if it worked in Win8, it will work in Win8.1.
No one is spending $600 on it
It was a comparison, nothing more..
People spend 600 dollars on a new iphone every release, because it goes from 2.0 ghz to 2.1 ghz and they think it has changed the game.
It's a waste of money in the price/performance/longevity ratio.
Why would I buy anything for win 8, when win 8 really does absolutely nothing for the consumer?
It's like the difference of 2 ghz to 2.1 ghz..
Not worth it..
Even the dx 11.1 won't be used by game makers for years.
Now let me watch someone post a link to ONE video game that uses it, that is already outdated "Cough cough, like RAGE, cough cough" Which wasn't even a good game anyway..
But I get what you're saying in regards to DX11.1 being a useless feature, but don't discount the entire OS just because one of its many improvements doesn't really matter.
As to this supposed 8.1 certification, I too don't see that it matters. I'm running W8 on a socket 775 P5Q Deluxe with a QX9650, and haven't had one driver issue.
:laugh::laugh::laugh: So what does this exactly means??