W
Wendell
I need to create a system startup disk to upgrade my system bios. How do I do
this?
this?
Wendell said:I need to create a system startup disk to upgrade my system bios. How do I
do
this?
Mike Hall - MVP said:Format a diskette
Download the new BIOS file and then copy it to the freshly formatted
diskette
Download the correct BIOS flash utility for your system and copy it to
the diskette
Go into BIOS and set the first bootable device to 'removable'
Reboot your computer with the diskette still in the drive..
Follow the onscreen instructions, hoping that you have the correct
BIOS file for your system, because if you don't................
Dave R. said:Mike, you forgot something - like how to make a system startup disk.
Simply formatting it won't do it as I'm sure you know. You also assume
the OP knows how to tell Vista to format a diskette, which from the
initial post I'm not sure is the case...
Wendell, if you still need help formatting a diskette as a system startup
disk:
Make sure you have a diskette in the drive - it will be completely erased,
so make sure it doesn't contain anything you don't want to lose.
From Explorer, right-click the floppy drive icon and click "Format..."
from the context menu
Check the box next to "Create an MS-DOS startup disk", then click the
Start button
Hope this helps.
Dave
As briefly noted, make absolutely sure the bios version you are trying toMike Hall - MVP said:Anybody attempting to flash the BIOS should know that already or, if not,
refrain from flashing the BIOS at all
--
Mike Hall - MVP
How to construct a good post..
http://dts-l.com/goodpost.htm
How to use the Microsoft Product Support Newsgroups..
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?pr=newswhelp&style=toc
Mike's Window - My Blog..
http://msmvps.com/blogs/mikehall/default.aspx
Seems that both you are presuming the system he is using actually has a
floppy drive. Many newer systems, and most laptops, do not even consider
floppy drives as an option let alone a standard piece of equipment. However
the information being given is correct and applicable when flashing the
bios on a system that does have floppy drive access.
Wendell said:Thank you all, this is just the info I was looking for.