then I haven't played with it yet.
Its pretty common for me to break my toys. I broke my cell phone within 24 hours.
I just hope the OP swapped it for him
Wait.
A Laptop has a motherboard.
Is this a revelation to you?
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Even the manufacturers recommend not flashing the BIOS unless you're trying to fix something specific. BIOS is not a driver and shouldn't be treated like one. The failure rate on BIOS flash is much higher than on drivers, and the consequences are much more severe.
I'm concerned that he has a PC shop and doesn't know this, unless his "shop" is Best Buy.
Well done.
I do agree with this, though. I wouldn't flash a laptop bois for S's and G's, but we don't know the specifics of this customer's motivation.
This was my point. He WASN'T FIXING ANYTHING, he just wanted to flash it.
You'd flash a laptop for the same reason you'd flash a motherboard...how hard is it to understand that? (and you ARE flashing the motherboard when you flash a laptop...they also have motherboards...)
it obviously does not apply to everything but unless there is a bios update to specifically fix something that is broken there is no reason to flash them
pretty sure im running stock bios on every single comp in my house
hell im still running the same nvidia drivers that came with my GTX 285
That was our service department that did that and had nothing to do with me though.
Yeah that's right I did't know laptops had motherboards.![]()
Sold an ASUS N61 laptop to a customer the other day. Very nice all round laptop. Very nice guy too. So he goes home and loads his stuff on the laptop, customizes it a bit and for no real reason decides to flash the BIOS. Boom he now had a $1600 brick. Brings it in today and we have to RMA it, he's going to go get another one. LOL why would you flash the BIOS on a laptop for no reason? On a motherboard I can sort of understand it because you usually have some fail-safes, but not on a laptop.
You should only flash a mobo if you are having documented issues.
Power went out once when I was flashing a desktop mobo years ago. Luckily I happened to have another identical one lying around and this was back in the days of removable EEPROMs so I just booted it with the spare and hot swapped the broken one back in then re flashed, bingo bango, fixed.
You'd flash a laptop for the same reason you'd flash a motherboard...how hard is it to understand that? (and you ARE flashing the motherboard when you flash a laptop...they also have motherboards...)
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Haha, thread backfire.
doesn't sound like it...
I personally understood what he was trying to say. Not sure why others can't.
doesn't sound like it...
