Found this on Thunderbolt and security on MS Windows:@3Dman
Don't know my captain !
New iPad Pros support WiFi 6, so it's likely that 2020 MacBook Pros and possibly new iMac might support it as well. Perhaps Fenvi will create a new WiFi 6 / BT 5.0 PCIe card for us?** Several New Apple Products Announced Today **
- New iPad Pros with LIDAR scanner
- New Mac mini
- Only a storage bump
- New MacBook Air with 10th Gen Intel CPU (
does it have WIFi 6?)
- No WiFi 6!
- But 2x the performance.
- Four-core model with 512GB at $1299. Not bad.
Do the nodes and all that load but no device attaches or do you get complete nada?
If the nodes do show up, then try using the SSDT attached. If that makes it work then you need need to replace the TBROM section of the current SSDTs. This was the path I had to take.
Weird. Do you still get the slow boot too?Nothing at all appears. Card is not even registered by the system as being plugged in. On NVM23 I get all the same results as @CaseySJ and the rest.
I think the z390 one works great on my AICHas anyone gotten that modded NVM43 to work/show up at all? I have only had success with NVM23 variations.
It is supposed to be in the DROM section of the firmware, but not every manufacturer adheres to this. Apple, for example, ships their computers with an empty or generic firmware UID, but Apple's EFI drivers assign a UID on boot.Found this on Thunderbolt and security on MS Windows:
Unique ID number
Every ThunderboltTM 3 Controller has a unique ID fused in silicon during production, this allows to identify a specific device
Doesn't specify where it's fused but probably not on the firmware then...
Unique ID is not UID in that case, it's Domain UUID. and it's not in the DROM section.It is supposed to be in the DROM section of the firmware, but not every manufacturer adheres to this. Apple, for example, ships their computers with an empty or generic firmware UID, but Apple's EFI drivers assign a UID on boot.
The Thunderbolt firmware on Designare Z390 also seems to ship with a generic UID, which is why we created the Thunderbolt DROM Micro-Guide so each of us can specify a unique ID.