Je crois qu'il y a un pb d'installation de drivers mais en suivant la pocédure lue dans cette FAQ, ça marcherait :
Q. I have herd problems about installing nForce drivers on Windows98/se. Is it safe to install them and do i have to go through any special procedure?
A. Lord Krim has made a nice little list for you to follow when installing nForce drivers in Windows98/se.
Installing the nforce drivers
1. Run the 2.0 driver udp for win98.
2. After it unpacks the files for the installation hit cancel.
3. Open Windows Explorer to the directory that the device drivers were unpacked to. (It's probably on your C: drive unless you picked something different when you were installing.)
4. Delete or move the display directory. (The installer hangs due to some updates that didn't make it into the win98 display drivers that are in this package.)
5. Now run Setup.exe and don't let it reboot when it asks you. Once you finally exit the installer, reboot. Windows likes to reboot after a driver is installed, but it asks you too soon here. If the system reboots to soon, you will have problems getting back into windows and have to use safe mode to remove the partially installed drivers and start over again.
Installing the display drivers
1. Download your favorite set of dets.
2. Run the dets you downloaded and reboot.
Optimizing
1. Enable DMA - DMA is not enabled in windows 98 by default, so you will need to enable it for the drives that can use it. This gets rid of scratchyness and staticy sounds in the audio. Do this at least for your hard drive.
1. Open your control panel.
2. Doubleclick on the system icon.
3. Click on the Device Manager tab.
4. Click the little plus sign next to the Disk Drives.
5. Right-click on the drive and go to properties.
6. Click on the Settings tab.
7. Click the checkbox next to DMA, ignore the warning that pops up, and reboot.
2. Download and install DirectX 8.1b or 9.0.
3. Install the Win98 Audio hotfix. (Make sure to install this after DirectX, not before.) This will get rid of the skipping around you will experience while playing mp3s. This might be on the CD included with your motherboard, but if it is not I can email it to you or you can try the link that is floating around this forum. Before long I might just go ahead and upload it to one of my servers.
4. If you have more than 512 MBs of ram add the line "MaxFileCache=512000" to your system.ini file under "[vcache]". Win98's vcache has a bug that gives it problems coming up with how much cacheing on the disk needs to be set aside if you have more than 512. Windows can become unstable and start giving you false out of memory messages if you don't have this line in your system.ini file.