VOGONS


First post, by W Gruffydd

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In other words, when did motherboards start using flash ROM chips to hold both the system BIOS and the CMOS settings?

What were some of the first motherboards that used re-writable flash ROM chips, while ditching the CMOS chip entirely, or relegating the CMOS chip to just keep time?

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Reply 1 of 6, by derSammler

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CMOS was never replaced by flash, only the mask ROM was.

Reply 2 of 6, by lazibayer

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The real time clock and CMOS RAM have been integrated into the south bridge. For Intel it happened with PIIX4.

Reply 3 of 6, by Moogle!

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Oldest motherboards I have seen with flashable roms are 486s. One or two with VLB.

Reply 4 of 6, by W Gruffydd

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derSammler wrote:

CMOS was never replaced by flash, only the mask ROM was.

What do you mean by mask ROM?

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Reply 6 of 6, by Cyberdyne

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I think he meant that some computers will hold setting, even when battery is dead long ago, only time will reset.
I have at least one Pentium 3 motherboard like that.

I am aroused about any X86 motherboard that has full functional ISA slot. I think i have problem. Not really into that original (Turbo) XT,286,386 and CGA/EGA stuff. So just a DOS nut.
PS. If I upload RAR, it is a 16-bit DOS RAR Version 2.50.