
These are all the bios revisions since my current board was released.
My board came with F4. Notice all the things the manufacturer noted for the revisions.
So sure, your machine is up and running and all appears to be fine. But if your a novice, running down issues it is tough enough finding the problem. How can you tell if its a bios issue or driver or software or even internet modem or connection. You have now stepped into the realm of "DIY". One trip to a computer fix it guy and you can spend that chunk of change you were trying to save.
A novice purchases an older board because its cheaper, puts his system together and something is off. How does he run it down efficiently. Hence my suggestion, 1st thing he does is get the bios for that board to the manufacturers lastest revision, before installing the OS or all the goodies. For the same reason I suggest getting a floppy and using it to manually update the bios, 1 revision at a time until you have the latest tested/non-beta revision in the board.
Install the cpu, the ram, the vid card, and the OS drive, put it in the case, hook up fans and a floppy. That's it. Get the bios right, get the basic hardware defaults right, make sure the mobo can operate in its simplest config.
Next install a cd/dvd drive and run mem test. Make sure the ram sticks have no errors.
Keep it simple. Idiot proof yourself. Do not rush. Take baby steps. Have your old puter there so you can get to the internet!
If you have probs at this stage either you have done something wrong or your new purchases are flawed.
Someone who is a professional or done it before.......................
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All manufacturers make disclaimers, from drug companies to computer companies. If you do not want personal independence, heed the disclaimers, buy a pre-built system. But if you are adventurous..................
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