Does anyone know why would Nero be capable to damage the firmware of the Sony laptop docking station?
See notice from Sony support:
http://www.ita.sel.sony.com/support/news/nero.html
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dodecahedron wrote:i guess Ahead thinks highly enough of CDRLabs forums to warrant a response. too bad they don't think i'm that important too.
ueberlein wrote:2. Nothing of the sort is known to us. In our testing Nero performs fine
on the mentioned Notebook series and no issues have been addressed
to us from Sony. (BTW: I actually burn with exactly that notebook - no
problem!)
4. As to Nero changing or modifying any recorders firmware, this feat is
simply technically impossible as anyone in the industry who has done
any repair on recorders can verify. It would take a firmware upgrade
utility to even create the potential for such an occurence.
Ahead Software Inc.
Udo Eberlein
President
cfitz wrote:As far as the points Mr. Eberlein made, two are either misleading or outright wrong. Point two is misleading. Mr. Eberlein states that Ahead's tests have shown no problems with the series of notebook computer in question. I don’t question the honesty of his statement in general. But, just because Ahead’s tests have not found any problems does not mean there are no problems. After all, if all of Ahead's tests conclusively determined that Nero is free of errors then there would be no need for the monthly bug fixes Mr. Eberlein describes. Second, it isn't clear from Mr. Eberlein's statements whether or not the docking station was part of Nero's testing. This is an important point because the problem was not with the notebook itself but rather with the docking station. Which brings us to point four.
Point four is wrong because the Sony news release did not make claims about recorder firmware being modified. Instead, it stated that the PCGA-DSM5 docking station's firmware could be damaged. And, speaking as an electrical engineer and software engineer with a good deal of experience in embedded systems, I have to disagree with Mr. Eberlein's assertion that it is utterly impossible for any firmware to be modified.
Since I do not have the details, I obviously can't say with any certainty, but I can imagine that the docking station maintains configuration information about connected peripherals in some form of nonvolatile memory in order to facilitate docking and undocking. And I can also imagine that such configuration information may be updated to reflect driver changes such as the installation of Nero's ASPI layer. If this is the case, then it is certainly possible that the interaction between Nero's drivers and the docking station's firmware could result in corruption of the nonvolatile configuration information, thus rendering the docking station inoperative. Again, this particular paragraph is all speculation, but it does represent at least one dissenting voice from the industry that Mr. Eberlein invokes as being unanimously in defense of his company.
CCampbell wrote:...And with Chris O'Brien's help at sony, we were able to set up a test system and duplicate this error, and help to narrow down the causes and when its caused.
It is caused by our Installer program, nothing to do with Nero or InCD directly, just the install process. In the past this same installer was known to replace the Systems Lower and Upper Filter drivers that would cause the CDROM/DVDROM and Recorders to no longer show up in Explorer, and show as driver conflicts in the Device Manager....
However, with the Sony Vaio Docking station attached, it is somehow corrupting the Docking stations firmware. We have not yet figured out how, as Sony and Ahead both agree it should be impossible........
Once this firmware has been damaged, the only solution it to reinstall the firmware for the docking station......
CCampbell wrote:But I give him <Mr. Eberlein> credit for jumping in with both feet to try and assist, knowing he would take a beating of some nature regardless of the outcome.
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