On Thu, 27 Feb 2003, Michelle Konzack wrote: > In PC's you can find someon, which can burn the EProm, > but on Laptops you are lost.
Don't even need to do that, just having another machine that uses the same size eeprom socket will work. Shut down your working pc, carefully loosen the BIOS chip enough that it will come out easily when you need it to.(this is FAR less risky than trying to use a chip puller on a machine that is active) Boot up your machine into DOS/FreeDOS/whatever(just not windows). Very carefully remove the bios chip(yes, with the machine on!) Label this or something so you don't accidentally flash this one!(been there, done that) Put in the bad chip from the other pc. Start your flash program, and flash the bad chip with the code update you want. Shut down the computer, take that chip out, put it back in the "bad" machine, and make sure it works now. Put your original bios chip back in the good machine. I've had to do this dozens of times while testing hacked bios's for a bunch of BioStar motherboards that wouldn't accept hard drives >32gig, and for machines where the bios upgrade just plain didn't work. I've seen a few laptops that used chips that were removeable, so the same procedure would work for those. Mike