@nolo

Sorry to hear about your experience, I had the luxury of having a dual
boot system, so all I had to do is download the utility from the mobo
web site a flash from windows OS. Updating a BIOS should not be an
uncommon thing these days, I did it for my XBOX, several Mobos in the
last month, and also my cell phone, which I flash about every month now.
But that's just me.

I do BIOS updates on a common occurrence, so I apologize if I caused
anyone to have to suffer by recommending a BIOS update.

One thing I do want to make clear is that if you read up on ECC, you
will know that you do NOT have to have ECC RAM in order to be able to
set it in the BIOS. ECC is just a software algorithm for detecting
errors in your RAM, which is possible for most all RAM today, not just
ECC RAM. I think there is even ECC RAM which doesn't support ECC Mode,
which again is just a way to report errors to your OS that there are
problems occurring with your RAM. Linux, as well as Windows support ECC
reporting to alert the user when errors in their RAM occur.

My thing is that everyone should do a little solid investigating before
jumping to conclusions that drivers are at fault, as you will only waste
your time and possibly a developers by steering ppl in the wrong
direction. The Ubuntu team will fix this if it is on their end. Ubuntu
is a community tool, so those of us having the problem should do our
part to help the developers fix, as they probably have more pressing
bugs to fix. It is possible to be a hardware issue, there are only 100
or so reports of this bug, which is NOT a lot, compared to all the
possible hardware combos out there.

-- 
EDAC amd64: WARNING: ECC is NOT currently enabled by the BIOS. Module will NOT 
be loaded.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/422536
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