S
Skybuck
- Jan 1, 1970
- 0
Hello,
I am definetly not the only one with probably a dead BIOS chip for the
Asus A8N32-SLI Deluxe motherboard. (Confirmed by third party bios
flashing service)
Let's recap:
1. Asus sells a motherboard with a bios version which does not
completely support 4 GB.
2. People with 4 GB of ram want to use all the ram.
3. People with the sound problems think maybe a BIOS flash will fix
it.
4. So many people flash the bios.
5. Flashing 1 million transistors (BIOS size) needs a success rate of
beyond %99.9999.
6. If 1 out of a million transistors fails to flash properly, problems
could and will occur. Very strange problems will occur.
So to me it doesn't seem strange many people are buying BIOS chips.
I can also understand an American sueing these sort of companies of
delivering incomplete/unfinished products.
Especially if a bios flash could kill the product.
Bye,
Skybuck.
I am definetly not the only one with probably a dead BIOS chip for the
Asus A8N32-SLI Deluxe motherboard. (Confirmed by third party bios
flashing service)
Let's recap:
1. Asus sells a motherboard with a bios version which does not
completely support 4 GB.
2. People with 4 GB of ram want to use all the ram.
3. People with the sound problems think maybe a BIOS flash will fix
it.
4. So many people flash the bios.
5. Flashing 1 million transistors (BIOS size) needs a success rate of
beyond %99.9999.
6. If 1 out of a million transistors fails to flash properly, problems
could and will occur. Very strange problems will occur.
So to me it doesn't seem strange many people are buying BIOS chips.
I can also understand an American sueing these sort of companies of
delivering incomplete/unfinished products.
Especially if a bios flash could kill the product.
Bye,
Skybuck.