Firepro Modded Drivers
This is a mod of the FirePro Drivers released on November 6, 2013 to support desktop cards.Catalyst 13.11 Beta 9. The Essential Eddie Money Zip. 2 has been used as guidance.If you are gaming please. AMD FirePro was AMD's brand of. The user-mode drivers as well as the kernel-mode drivers for AMD FirePro. Some variants can also be soft-modded to a. AMD FirePro™ and Radeon™ Pro graphics empower content creators and designers at many levels, from casual makers and students all the way up to seasoned.
Originally Posted by treedude yeah that guy at benchmark3d got recently hired so the driver mods have been dead for a while AMD only releases FirePro drivers every 4 months too so next release will be in 4 months. Do you have Specviewperf 11 benchmarks (and possibly specapc)?
Last I heard only HD4000 series was possible through softmod. Do you need an equivalent Radeon? Firepro W9000 = HD7970GE (384-bit memory bus, 2048 shaders) with 6GB ECC VRAM (Tahiti XT).
I used Orca (an msi editor) to swap out the included tables of the Radeon to the Firepro Drivers. Within AMD_ASIC_Includes there is a list of Cards, for Radeon Drivers there are Compatible Radeon Cards which are (FirePro+Radeon), for Firepro Drivers there are only Compatible FirePro Cards. I swapped the lists for the msi's that had only FirePro cards on them and then edited C8158352.inf (Windows 8 x64) and C7158352.inf (Windows 7 x64), you can see familiar lines from the driver inf's from that link down below.
It's nothing that makes the cards read as if they are a certain card (but it's possible to spoof a card in Catalyst Control Center for locked AMD Catalyst Control Center Features, but not as a recognizable Hardware ID that would require precise bios modding). All I'm doing is making the FirePro drivers can be installed on Radeon Cards. I am running these Drivers on My 7970 GHz edition. Mini Golf For Pc. I am not adding in HD Radeon files or swapping folders, this is purely editing a couple files to allow install. Can you run Specviewperf 11 on 1080p? Thanks Last I heard from softmodding people was on Laptop ones seem to have been worked on I can help a bit with the Firepro HD5000 series I have an actual Firepro from that series.
Firepro drivers are basically bug-less for professional apps (they're checked and validated) that's why I'm very interested in this thread. Edit: I found the benchmark3d driver you were talking about. Edit 2: also can you run BOINC (Poem@Home, Einstein@Home in particular but Milkyway@Home, PrimeGrid, SETI@Home, DistrRTgen and Collatz also)?
You said it's unsuitable for gaming (obvious) but what about BOINC?
More than a question this is an advice, if you are running Windows on a Mac Pro Late 2013 (the so called 'ash tray') and you want to upgrade to Windows 10 you will have some problems ONLY with the video cards, at this moment (Monday, July 27, 2015) the AMD Boot Camp drivers downloaded with the Boot Camps assistant on OS X are NOT working at all with Windows 10, also, the drivers available directly from the AMD site are buggy on Windows 8.1 and don't work at all in Windows 10. After realizing that the video cards didn't work I had to rollback (downgrade) to Windows 8.1 and I'm amazed that is quite easy and very fast, here is a video showing how: So you have been warned, wait until Apple release the Windows 10 Boot Camp drivers. Mac Pro (Late 2013), OS X Yosemite (10.10.4), Boot Camp Posted on Jul 27, 2015 5:15 AM.
I've successfully upgraded to Windows 10, and I'm currently using what you could called 'modded' AMD drivers. I have used them fore a while, after I grew tired of no updates, and learned about the method on some forums. Right now I have installed the AMD Catalyst 15.7.1 update, and it runs just fine. Have used modded drivers for some months, and haven't encountered any issues (once I got a successfull install). I have a Mac Pro (2013) with the D700s. The process, which actually is quite easy: 1. Download the latest driver (at the moment of writing 15.7.1), the AMD Omega 14.12 driver, and the official December Bootcamp Driver 14.301.
Make a new folder called 'modded driver', which purpose explains itself. Copy everytning from the latest driver to 'modded driver'. Copy everything from the Bin64 folder of the Omega driver and overwrite everyting in the Bin64 folder of 'modded driver'. Copy 'InstallManagerApp.exe' and 'InstallManager.dll' from the Bin64 folder of the December Bootcamp driver, and overwrite the corresponding files in the Bin64 folder of 'modded drivers'. Now you are ready to install the driver. Just run 'setup.exe' in the root folder of 'modded drivers' Now you should have new and better performing drivers installed, working perfectly with Windows 10.