Aspi Driver Windows 7 64 Bit 15

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Christal Rasband

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Jul 8, 2024, 5:37:49 AM7/8/24
to resempmetear

Recently I've been tinkering with this really nice Toshiba Satellite 320CDT, I was using USB to transfer files as it was the most convenient for me, but I found that 20 minute capped driver to be annoying. I came up with an idea that sounded stupid at first, but I tried it just in case, and it worked.

aspi driver windows 7 64 bit 15


Download File https://vittuv.com/2yLPrw



The key (or keys rather) are those "USB ASPI" drivers floating around. Any of them should work, but I've only tried this with the Panasonic one, which should support some amount of EHCI as well. This gets loaded in the CONFIG.SYS, and right after that, a driver from Adaptec called ASPIDISK.SYS. This driver is commonly used to initialise SCSI hard drives after the Adaptec driver for the SCSI controller. It just so happens that the Adaptec drivers for their SCSI controllers, and these "USB ASPI" drivers are using the same thing, so this driver will initialise any "hard drives" found by the "USB ASPI" drivers.

IOMGOHCI.SYS: Iomega OHCI ASPI driver
IOMGUHCI.SYS: Iomega UHCI ASPI driver
MEDLOGIC.SYS: MediaLogic UHCI/OHCI/EHCI ASPI driver (take EHCI with a grain of salt)
NOVAC.SYS: Novac UHCI/OHCI ASPI driver
PANASONC.SYS: Panasonic UHCI/OHCI/EHCI ASPI driver (again, take EHCI with a grain of salt)
UHCIOHCI.SYS: Novac UHCI/OHCI ASPI driver (different version?)
ASPIDISK.SYS: Aforementioned Adaptec ASPI disk driver

I Formatted a flash drive to fat16 , its a bit dodgy at times but seems to work alright (windows 3.1 seems to think its my cd drive and wigs out unless I pick the cd drive then the usb else it crashes if I just select the usb)

The drivers you listed are only ASPI managers, aka, the ones that I said that you need to use together with ASPIDISK.SYS to actually get USB mass storages found by the ASPI managers to show up as actual drives.

As an addendum, the only sort of downside to this method I envision is Adaptec's ASPIDISK.SYS not telling you the drive letter of the drive it just mounted. I'll be looking for similar alternatives to ASPIDISK.SYS, but specifically avoiding the ones made for USB drives as I have tried those in the past.

the drivers don't require switches in my experience, they do have them for forcing some modes but I haven't found myself needing that, just pick what driver works, most of them should, but start with panasonic, then try the other ones if that doesn't work

Hi Thrawn.
I like this blog. WinXP SP2 64-bit is my favorite operating system
I use it on NVME disk in the PCIe X4 adapter. I have been looking for a way for a long time how to do a TRIM hand.
ADATA SSD Toolbox does not detect NVMe disk.

Kept poking and poking at this problem. I finally got a huge crack further toward breaking this problem when I used this MUCH NEWER version of an ASPI driver from Rocket Division Software/StarBurn Software.

Hope things have been well for you. I can confirm this process you listed above for Win10 DOES work under Windows 10 version 1909 and SIREN Jukebox 2.0c from Sonic Foundry when using the StarBurn ASPI driver. I was using this under an Optiplex 7070 system. For Windows 10 64bit, it does appear to differ from when I had this under Windows 7 64bit. The settings for the Use ASPI and Use SPTI were reversed under Windows 7 x64.

A goldmine!
I was beginning to think I was the last person on the planet using xp64! but the stuff here should help me eek out another decade out of the old OS.
As you offer, I would like your help with retrofitting ACHI drivers.

Me gustara ayudar, pero estoy viendo que est utilizando un sistema operativo moderno (Vista / 7). En realidad, no debera tener ningn problema con el acceso a medios Blu-Ray en ese sistema operativo, como UDF 2.5 ya est construido adentro. As que estoy pensando que es la parte ASPI necesita?

Tambin, por favor considere que un determinado software el Kernel Space que podra bloquear el acceso a los medios de comunicacin en el Explorador de Windows cuando se activa (AnyDVD HD hace esto, otros productos tambin lo hacen, que haba necesidad de desactivar ese software para Windows llanura Explorador de Acceso al trabajo!).

I have an application that has an embedded ActiveX control that making low level call to ASPI.DLL in Windows 7.0 and its needs Administrator rights to run the Application.
Under Windows XP formerly we can run under normal User rights.

Thanks for your kind remarks, even though I am unsure how I might have actually helped you. It seems your Sonic software is able to use SPTI directly, not via FrogASPI wrapping? If I am not mistaken, Microsofts own SPTI layer is implemented starting with at least WinXP, and from there all the way up to Win8.

Edit: Ah, SPTI is actually quite old as Wikipedia tells me. Support for Microsofts API starts with Windows NT it seems, although I am not sure whether this means NT 4.0 or NT 3.51 or what.. but yeah.

Actually I had set this to use ASPI under Windows NT and it would not recognize the two CD/DVD burners I had. (both of which are SATA). Once I selected the SPTI it worked but only after I had renamed that great Frogaspi program you found.

I see, how strange. With SPTI, all ASPI dependencies should be gone, and I would expect the software to just talk to Microsofts layer, not needing anything else. Apparently, there is something more going on behind the curtains with Sonics Foundry Siren Jukebox 2.0c.

8. I still find that Siren is one of the Better Media Players and I can create custom playlists, use the MediaFace II program that comes with the Retail CD of Siren to print out Spine or custom CD labels

I have been using Siren Jukebox 2.0c since Windows 98se and I am currently using this fine piece of software still under Windows 7 x64 with 8gb of Ram. I know this is older software, but the features it offers and the fact that someone found an easy solution to get CDDB information from the Free service working is why I still use this program. I know there are other programs but for me, I like the feel and the look of this program.

I have a new PC running Windows 7 64 Bit. Since there are no new drivers for the Nikon Coolscan III I tried to use VMWare or VirtualBox to run WindowsXP and install the scanner plus drivers there. This is how far I got:

- Nikon Scan 3.1.2 sees the scanner and tries to scan, the scanner starts scanning but NikonScan is already finished before the scanner has finished its operation. And instead of an image just some garbage is displayed on screen and the log says "Keine Scanobjekte (no objects to scan)"

Now this is where I am stuck. I have already tried different ASPI drivers without success. I have tried both VMWare Player on Windows and Virtualbox on Linux. Both show exactly the same behaviour.


VueScan does work (I have only the demo right now). However, I liked the Silverfast plugin for Photoshop and I wanted to continue using it. That did not work. So it seems I have to go the VueScan way.

You require a Windows Vista 64 bit file (all explained on the web page) plus you do require Vuescan. It provides the driver everyone is looking for but windows will not accept it without this brilliant work around.

The problem is, connectivity to it is through a TWAIN (16-bit) driver. I have an XP laptop for communications with old cameras (like my EOS-1D), but I don't have any software that can use the TWAIN driver. The EOS 1D came with Photoshop 5 LE, but that wants a TWAIN_32 driver. This also seems to be the case for Windows itself and for the NDP2 scanner app.

64 bit Windows 10 doesn't support 16 bit applications. You could use a Windows XP virtual machine using the built in VM Hyper V. Otherwise you could use a PC having the 32 bit version of Windows 10 and use this method -16-bit-application-support-windows-10/

Update on this... I found that, at the bottom of the opendrivers page, there was also a link to a "backup" server that did allow download of the "newer" (2001 or so) TWAIN32 driver for the DCS400 series.

I was not able to install this driver on Windows XP until I ran the installer in Windows 95 compatibility mode. That allowed it to be installed, but it cannot find the camera when launched. I suspect that this driver is hard-coded to use 16-bit ASPI. The camera is detected by Windows itself, so the issue is not a problem with the SCSI adapter anything else SCSI, but the driver definitely uses ASPI and its notes state that Windows 2000 and Windows Me are not supported, which probably means XP isn't meant to work either.

I ended up building a Windows 98 SE laptop, and installing on that the TWAIN32 driver for DSC4xx and the Adaptec (4.71, I believe) ASPI driver. With that, I was able to use Photoshop 5 to launch the TWAIN driver and connect to the camera over an Adaptec 1460 SlimSCSI card and cable.

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