Originally posted by: RebateMonger
Actually, most motherboard manufacturers DON'T want you to use floppy disks for BIOS updates anymore, since they are the least reliable form of data storage (right along with invisible ink), and a data read error during a BIOS flash can be messy, at best.
Originally posted by: John
Originally posted by: RebateMonger
Actually, most motherboard manufacturers DON'T want you to use floppy disks for BIOS updates anymore, since they are the least reliable form of data storage (right along with invisible ink), and a data read error during a BIOS flash can be messy, at best.
The only reason mfg's are stepping away from floppy updates is most systems don't have a floppy anymore. In fact up until a few years ago floppy flashes were still the #1 way to flash your bios.
I've read about more problems with Windows-based flashes than floppy disks. When the end user has 60 processes running and an unstable OS the last thing he needs is a windows bios flash utility. In fact if a floppy version is available that is my first preference.
Originally posted by: Rastus
I've always wanted to know how to do this too. I made a bootable CD to flash my Asus A7N8X, but when I ran the flash program, it defaults to the A: drive with no way to change.