How Risky is Updating Your BIOS? ( + Corruption Demonstration)

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • Find out what happens when you corrupt the BIOS!
    ▼ Timestamps:▼
    0:00 - Intro
    0:34 - BIOS Explained
    2:29 - BIOS Hardware
    4:00 - Updating BIOS
    6:21 - Is BIOS Update Necessary?
    8:46 - Corrupted BIOS Causes
    9:33 - BIOS Recovery Options
    14:04 - DIY BIOS Recovery
    15:58 - BIOS Corruption Demonstration
    17:59 - BIOS Recovery Attempt
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 3,2K

  • @InsaneFire10YT
    @InsaneFire10YT Před 3 lety +5506

    Me updating the bios on every computer in my house during a Florida Hurricane: *Interesting*

    • @Whising
      @Whising Před 3 lety +75

      Lmfao

    • @danielquintero2339
      @danielquintero2339 Před 3 lety +266

      Get a ups, it’s saved my life many times before

    • @vincentguttmann2231
      @vincentguttmann2231 Před 3 lety +95

      /laughs in laptop/

    • @vincentguttmann2231
      @vincentguttmann2231 Před 3 lety +104

      @@danielquintero2339 or a laptop, it has a built-in UPS and is more portable. If you have a system with thunderbolt, you can even have an external GPU

    • @jayashk8229
      @jayashk8229 Před 3 lety +95

      Haha I updated mine and never knew about the risks 💀💀

  • @nonowords7857
    @nonowords7857 Před 3 lety +191

    I have a story.
    A friend came in to give a laptop that shut down randomly and displayed overheating. So, I opened it up and cleaned it. Didn't check if it would randomly shut down, I just checked if it would boot and then I returned it. Then a few minutes later he calls me and says it randomly shutting down again. So I said, wait, Ill come over to your place and check it out. When I arrived, the laptop's BIOS WAS BEING UPDATED!. Apparently he turned it back on several times and the old problem of shutting down randomly still continued, and one time when it shut off, it recommended a bios update, and my friend clicked YES. Dude almost bricked his laptop. Had me screaming on him for a while for doing that on a lappy that randomly crashes.
    In any case, the silicon was faulty, and I installed a new processor and it worked out fine. 👍

    • @bentley187
      @bentley187 Před 2 lety +1

      What processor?

    • @nonowords7857
      @nonowords7857 Před 2 lety +8

      @@bentley187 it was i3 3110m i believe. Swtiched it to a i5 3230m i had laying around. It was socketed, so no need for soldering, i just put in an new one and everything turned out fine.

    • @nonowords7857
      @nonowords7857 Před 2 lety +4

      @Bruh Bruh yea, i5 3230m is better than i3 3110m, so you can call it an updgrade. Just removed the old one from the socket and plugged in the new one. This was possible in all laptops before but now almost all are soldered and you cant remove them.

    • @Guru_1092
      @Guru_1092 Před 2 lety +9

      @@nonowords7857 I miss the days of upgradeable/replaceable laptop CPUs. :(

    • @GabeTheGamer
      @GabeTheGamer Před 2 lety +3

      That friend is so lucky his laptop didn’t succumb to a corrupted BIOS. There were so many risks that came with that decision. Mainly, the laptop kept shutting down randomly which could’ve interrupted the BIOS update entirely. The other risk is the person’s decision making overall. He should’ve just did nothing else with his laptop and waited for you to arrive. Plus, it seemed that he clicked “YES” instantly. I’m not sure of the entire story, but I can definitely guarantee that it could’ve ended a lot worse.

  • @ThioJoe
    @ThioJoe  Před rokem +499

    A Note: Some have mentioned that it's possible the reason the recovery tool failed was because it didn't support large flash drives like the 32GB one I was using, and this is an issue that has come up in the past. Unfortunately I had already trashed the laptop so I'm unable to test that, but if you are having that issue, it might be worth trying a flash drive that is USB 2.0 and 4GB or less, and ensuring it's formatted as FAT32.

    • @strangepizza7019
      @strangepizza7019 Před rokem +40

      My ASUS laptop requires the flash drive to be FAT32 to be recognized by the bios. Maybe that was the problem.

    • @Alexminecrafter1
      @Alexminecrafter1 Před rokem +6

      dam if i would somehow destroy my only laptops bios than i might try but it's a lenovo so it might not work

    • @countzero1136
      @countzero1136 Před rokem +9

      @@strangepizza7019 That applies to the majority of hardware systems. Most people format USB sticks to NTFS (especially those using Windows for which it'll be the default option), but FAT32 should always be the go-to for this sort of thing. Motherboards very rarely will have built-in support for NTFS, as it really requires Windows to work (or Linux which can read and write NTFS without issues), but the low-level hardware isn't going to work with anything other than FAT32 in most cases

    • @o0Donuts0o
      @o0Donuts0o Před rokem +17

      You don’t need a smaller usb drive. You just need a smaller partition on it. FAT32 and 200mb is more than enough for the task.

    • @monomonster
      @monomonster Před rokem +7

      I had that problem with an old Dell laptop I was trying to update the BIOS. I tried a 1gig USB drive and it just refused to boot from it. I then setup it up on a 256 meg drive. No problem.

  • @shmehfleh3115
    @shmehfleh3115 Před rokem +295

    UEFI does a lot more than just tell your computer where to find the bootloader. It also acts as an abstraction layer between the OS and the physical hardware. It usually handles stuff like wake-on-lan, virtualization extensions, hardware RAID and full-disk encryption, too. It's why it's generally a good idea to keep on top of EFI releases for your PC/motherboard. That said, never go bleeding-edge with them. Wait a month or two after any new firmware release to see if the forums light up with posts about problems being introduced by that new release. I learned this the hard way once.

    • @SaraMorgan-ym6ue
      @SaraMorgan-ym6ue Před 7 měsíci +3

      it's ok just delete your uefi and start from scratch kiddo😘

    • @lildvsvevo
      @lildvsvevo Před 6 měsíci +2

      This. This is literally why it’s still called a BIOS in the first place. It’s a BIOS that got a Master’s

    • @noway9880
      @noway9880 Před 4 měsíci

      yup. nice & sexy.

  • @Xeros_VII
    @Xeros_VII Před 3 lety +1466

    "I bought a laptop as a sacrifice"
    TECH FOR THE TECH GOD. TECH FOR THE TECH GOD

  • @Kyzerii
    @Kyzerii Před 3 lety +1550

    who remembers the old days of thiojoe where he would make videos like "How to triple wifi speed for free" where he would tell you to wrap your router in aluminium foil

    • @astphaire
      @astphaire Před 3 lety +75

      Weren’t those based on an old comedy show

    • @memorythief1952
      @memorythief1952 Před 3 lety +46

      Well if you're wrapping the right stuff, that could get you some gain, but c'mon 3x speed is latency not throughput, and while I'ma not familiar with the videos or channel as it may have been; based on the interferences on your area, it could be feasible to get a 3x ms latency improvement by wrapping the body to separate the internal from externally pervasive radiation... If it was bad to begin with, and for said reasons.

    • @gamerdragon6159
      @gamerdragon6159 Před 3 lety +27

      Yeah and I thought those were real lol

    • @Harlow.
      @Harlow. Před 2 lety +12

      That was infinite solutions

    • @jackpaul7195
      @jackpaul7195 Před 2 lety +1

      Yes it worked

  • @breakingmad2645
    @breakingmad2645 Před rokem +555

    Had no idea updating BIOS was risky. I updated mines last week because i was upgrading from a R5 2600 to an R7 5800x. It was actually super easy to do.

    • @shetshay137
      @shetshay137 Před rokem +128

      Yeah... It can be dangerous. I took a recommendation online to update my BIOS because I had some interesting crashing with my overclock, i accidently left my overclock settings on while updating the bios and it crashed... i was fucked for 2 days

    • @prizma45
      @prizma45 Před rokem +10

      @@shetshay137 😬

    • @OakBlox
      @OakBlox Před rokem +6

      its spelled mine /j

    • @aboveaveragebayleaf9216
      @aboveaveragebayleaf9216 Před rokem +16

      Yeah you definitely want stable settings when doing it.

    • @countzero1136
      @countzero1136 Před rokem +16

      @@aboveaveragebayleaf9216 And you DEFINITELY want to have access to another computer in case you need to download a file to fix a corrupt BIOS

  • @manosgouzibas8045
    @manosgouzibas8045 Před rokem +68

    Well, I had the worst case scenario. My cousin was updating the bios with a slightly different variant version. Bios did not recognise it before installation so it bricked. Long story short, i had to use an spi flasher, find a compatible program, desolder the chip, find the correct model and manually flash the .bin into it. The satisfaction was huge after all!

  • @river1403
    @river1403 Před 3 lety +633

    My computer has dual UEFI chips. There’s a backup chip that can take over to reflash the main one if something goes wrong.

    • @Digital-Dan
      @Digital-Dan Před 3 lety +19

      Oops. Just came here to suggest this.

    • @AzmaeenRubyat1
      @AzmaeenRubyat1 Před 3 lety +14

      congratulations

    • @andydehmaniac
      @andydehmaniac Před 3 lety +12

      I have too, it's called UEFI DualBIOS (mine is an old B75 chipset PC, although I have a ROG Zenith II Extreme)

    • @gr1mkeks
      @gr1mkeks Před 3 lety +3

      I have it on my current fm2 Asus motherboard

    • @AfroKing.
      @AfroKing. Před 3 lety +8

      He mentions it at 9:34

  • @tecstalinramirez
    @tecstalinramirez Před 3 lety +92

    What a coincidence, I was at work yesterday and a computer didn't recognize a headphone connected in the front jack 3.5, so I updated the BIOS and it worked after that.

    • @TheExileFox
      @TheExileFox Před 3 lety +4

      In that case it was due to a bad driver

    • @ApfelJohannisbeere
      @ApfelJohannisbeere Před 3 lety +1

      @@TheExileFox There are driver version that expect a certain BIOS/Firmware version and wont work if not used.

  • @louism771
    @louism771 Před rokem +54

    Interesting side note: During a BIOS update the downloaded file is usually verified to prevent flashing of broken or manipulated images. BIOS flashback in some cases skips this step entirely. This allows for flashing of custom images, ie adding NVME boot support to older mainboards and other hacky stuff.

    • @BomberX20
      @BomberX20 Před 5 měsíci +2

      This verification saved me from corrupting my bios

  • @GamePlayShare
    @GamePlayShare Před rokem +13

    Flashed dozens on BIOSes. Never had any problem. Its next to impossible to mess up if you do everything properly so reading readme files is a must.

  • @bbbl67
    @bbbl67 Před 3 lety +477

    This happened to a friend of mine, but I was there watching it happen. Back during Y2K, there was a rash of BIOS updating going on. I personally thought that it was mostly unnecessary to do, as Y2K was not really about modern computers like PC's, it was more about ancient computers from the 70's or earlier which were still running in businesses at the time. Anyways, we were part of an IT team, and were applying Y2K patches for servers, so we had to come in after midnight and work through into the early morning, while no one else was using the computers. My friend's boss asked him to update the BIOS of the Dell desktop that he was using for his personal work PC, while we were in there for the servers. I told my buddy not to do that, as there was more danger upgrading the BIOS than there was in not upgrading it. But he didn't listen, and sure enough the BIOS upgrade screwed everything up. The BIOS didn't fail its installation, it installed correctly, but for some reason Dell had changed the hard drive mapping routine between the two versions of the BIOS, and the new BIOS could no longer read the hard drive partition, even though nothing had changed on the hard drive. Then later we found out that Dell didn't even make the previous version of the BIOS available for downgrade! The only solution was to reformat the hard drive to the new partition scheme, and reinstall Windows. All previous data on the drive was lost, obviously! Thanks Dell.

    • @MarceloArzubialdeRodriguez
      @MarceloArzubialdeRodriguez Před 2 lety +96

      You express it in such a way that I am seriously thinking that you are the friend.

    • @ravindraakula6560
      @ravindraakula6560 Před 2 lety +54

      Can't you connect the hard disk to another similar dell model and recover the data lost

    • @bbbl67
      @bbbl67 Před 2 lety +25

      @@ravindraakula6560 There were no other similar Dell models available.

    • @NetRolller3D
      @NetRolller3D Před 2 lety +9

      @«tutacat» sounds more like it's about CHS mapping, which is even weirder given that CHS was essentially extinct by the time of Y2K.

    • @eleventy-seven
      @eleventy-seven Před rokem +3

      Dell is hell.

  • @tdrg_
    @tdrg_ Před 3 lety +237

    Me: Updating the BIOS
    PC: *remains unbootable*
    Me: Let’s see what we can do
    This video’s thumbnail:

  • @JimmySolution
    @JimmySolution Před 2 lety +158

    Sir, this is what I call a professional and well documented informative tutorial. Well done 👍

  • @fostxswire1600
    @fostxswire1600 Před 2 lety +71

    Watching this video I realize a BIOS update was one of the scarier and little known questions I have had about PC support. Thank you for bringing light to this topic! ThioJoe you covered it in great detail and answered my questions. No, I do not need to update my BIOS without a specific reason.

    • @KashifNawaz85
      @KashifNawaz85 Před 2 lety +1

      It's not that scary at all. I updated a lot of BIOSs and not even a single time have an issue. Rule of thumb always use Windows update method it is much safer then the pre-boot one. Some system even has a backup BIOS in case the update failed the immediately revert to previous version. So in short you can update BIOS without fear.

    • @yxra123
      @yxra123 Před 2 lety +1

      @@KashifNawaz85 I have a dual bios, I'm about to update my bios but if anything goes wrong would my PC revert to the previous version or do I need to take out my 3v battery or comos for 5 mins then put it back? Because I heard from someone that I needed to do that

    • @KashifNawaz85
      @KashifNawaz85 Před 2 lety +1

      @@yxra123 As I told earlier modern computer has makes copy of BIOS in backup, if for any reason the update didn't finish successfully then the the backup one load and the computer start. Still OEM provide a method to recover the BIOS if it's failed to start but I never found such issues.
      Make sure, close all programs in Windows, disable Bitlocker encryption, and start update process and keep power on until complete. I did BIOS updates regularly and never encountered any issues. Both my laptop and desktop are on latest version of BIOS.

    • @yxra123
      @yxra123 Před 2 lety +1

      @@KashifNawaz85 great thank you, I'm about to start updating my bios but my flashdrive got delayed so I'll have to go buy one tomorrow. Thanks again for answering!

    • @Casonplayz
      @Casonplayz Před rokem +2

      @@yxra123 was the update successful?

  • @ethanbelton9522
    @ethanbelton9522 Před 3 lety +311

    As an electronics repair technician I've seen this happen more often than you'd think. For most motherboards we simply flash the chip with it's respective firmware using a similar tool you showed. Except its SPI to USB A. In rare cases we get a non standard cmos chip, then we use leads we souldered to a USB A male with tiny alligator clips on the other end. The software isn't that difficult. We have a dumbed down GUI based CMOS flashing tool that handles the complex stuff on the backend. Essentially it's like copying a file to a USB drive.

    • @Noqtis
      @Noqtis Před rokem +1

      I just use a floppy disk 🤷

    • @circleoflife12
      @circleoflife12 Před rokem

      Can you share some tips for me.I have an old motherboard i tried to update bios and it bricked my motherboard.I cant find any new motherboard bcs my pc is old but i have no money to buy new pc.Any tools to reset the bios chip?

    • @Adil-sv2xi
      @Adil-sv2xi Před rokem +1

      I got a virus on my laptop which corrupted the bios, causing a cmos error on boot and sometimes it would get stuck on a black screen. I gave it to a 3rd party store that somehow managed to fix it after failing the first time, I assume they also flashed the bios and cmos chip since they got corrupted.

    • @danielwagner6290
      @danielwagner6290 Před rokem

      The vast majority of bios updates is done successfully in most cases. As long as you follow all instructions for that pc or motherboard. If your not confident in that than you should let someone else update the bios. In my case all bios updates I have performed was successful. It really isn't hard at all. It may be scary the first time you do it because of all the scary language used about updating the bios. Just ignore all of that, follow all instructions and away you go. Be confident but make sure you follow all instructions.

  • @nonowords7857
    @nonowords7857 Před 3 lety +206

    I really needed this video. Thank you.
    EDIT : Man im serious, cant find any good tech channels that have made a video on this subject, and its been bugging me for a while. Love you man.

    • @Patrick2480
      @Patrick2480 Před 3 lety +2

      CareyHolzman made one i think.

    • @SuQmEdIc69
      @SuQmEdIc69 Před 3 lety +1

      Linus tech tips: am I a joke to you?

    • @nonowords7857
      @nonowords7857 Před 3 lety +2

      @@SuQmEdIc69 Linus didn't make a video on how bios gets corrupted and how to fix it. He has just made videos on settings about the bios.

    • @Mageman17
      @Mageman17 Před 3 lety +1

      @@SuQmEdIc69 one would think he or one member of his team would cover that.

  • @PeskyPoet
    @PeskyPoet Před rokem +129

    One of the worst bios experiences I had was my first HP Pavilion. Wiped it to give to my brother and the bloatware decided to do a bios update (and general driver installs). While the bios is being written a Windows update restart Countdown appears in the bottom right... And it refused to let me click cancel. HP were amazing as the device was 3 years old and they still serviced it to recover the bios. Learned JTAGs because of this. 😂 EDIT: this was 2010.

    • @whirlwind872
      @whirlwind872 Před rokem +5

      What, how were you even updating the bios from within windows in the first place?
      Usually you put the bios update on USB and then boot into the bios directly and flash it, I've never heard of being able to do it while the computer is booted into the operating system

    • @PeskyPoet
      @PeskyPoet Před rokem +3

      @@whirlwind872 the HP Pavilion used a bios updator tool from within windows. It's been years since I had that laptop but my works laptop has a similar bios updating tool. It's just a ROM chip at the end of the day, providing the hardware is setup to allow flashing the right software can do it from the operating system level.

    • @kalestra4198
      @kalestra4198 Před rokem +4

      I have a hp laptop, it literally decided to update bios from windows update randomly without asking me, so stupid.

    • @cekart
      @cekart Před rokem +2

      Next time you don't want windows to reboot itself after an update because you are doing important work or whatever, just use this command: "shutdown -a"

    • @NancyWilliams-xn3hr
      @NancyWilliams-xn3hr Před 7 měsíci

      @@kalestra4198 SAME!!! I did not know it was a bad thing, because now my laptop screen is black 😔

  • @ersterhernd
    @ersterhernd Před rokem +5

    14:54 It may seem somewhat daunting at first glance, but the flashrom command via the linux commandline works great with these USB-based BIOS flashing devices. No de-soldering when using the SOP8 clip and little to lose when a motherboard bricked anyways. A very satisfying experience when a previously dead system springs back to life with minimal cost involved. Good that you mentioned this method in your video.

  • @htcmlcrip
    @htcmlcrip Před 3 lety +150

    reprogramming chips: i got one, and you can clip them on the chip directly (with special extension grips)... not all chips needs desoldering

    • @ThioJoe
      @ThioJoe  Před 3 lety +38

      Good to know

    • @mustafacanaydn3872
      @mustafacanaydn3872 Před 3 lety +4

      I bought those grips but for some reason they didnt have stable connection and after hours of trying I decided to buy a Eeprom programmer and do the desoldering and soldering thing.

    • @htcmlcrip
      @htcmlcrip Před 3 lety +2

      Depends on hoe exposed pins are. Sometimes I get someone else to hold pressed down (hard to do it if you on your own) ...

    • @namesurname4666
      @namesurname4666 Před 3 lety +2

      they even work for various devices like television

    • @PeterMaddison2483
      @PeterMaddison2483 Před 2 lety

      Thye're EPROM chips, which are always removable

  • @nill116
    @nill116 Před 3 lety +191

    "I bought a laptop as a sacrifice."
    **hawaiian drums intensify**

  • @brunopaivapassini3244
    @brunopaivapassini3244 Před rokem +103

    As an Eletrical Engineer I would say as a rule of thumb: update your BIOS only if you want a specifc function of the update if you don't know what you are doing. If you know what are you doing, you can update it and it will hardly go wrong unless you get power issues or the wrong version of the BIOS. And if that happens it is easy enough to re-record it but you will need a special hardware-device to do this

    • @southernflatland
      @southernflatland Před rokem +15

      Haha, how very true, but that reminds me of my own experience with a bricked BIOS and how I went about fixing it.
      The thing was that I wanted to change my boot logo, so I picked up the manufacturer's utility to modify the resources. Piss poor translation of instructions mind you, but things made enough sense, I thought...
      Well there were actually 3 different images, the main image, the manufacturer's logo, and the chip logo. I wanted to replace all 3 in a way to display as if it was one single image, so I had a fun round going back and forth with Paint Shop Pro, but that's besides the point.
      Where things went wrong for me was the very first time I tried my modified BIOS file, I replaced all 3 images in one single editing session before I saved it. BIG MISTAKE!
      The file seemed to save correctly without issue, so I flashed it. Yay brick! I ended up figuring out that the resource editor itself was apparently a bit buggy, and I needed to replace only one image at a time, save that, then restart the utility to replace the next image. Then wash, rinse and repeat for the third image of course.
      Anyways, I was working at a computer repair shop at the time I bricked my own system, and we didn't have any such hardware to reflash a BIOS chip, so I got creative...
      I looked in our junk parts bin for any laptop motherboard I could find with the same capacity BIOS chip. Didn't matter to me what model at this point, it only mattered to me that the board marginally functioned.
      I found one, a different model but by the same manufacturer, so I figured the utility should work if I gave it the force wrong updates command. The particular board I picked was a good spare parts candidate as it had been damaged by electrostatic discharge which caused permanent color banding on screen coming from a damaged GPU, but otherwise worked fine.
      So, I hooked the thing up and did a quick Windows install on a spare drive, then took my modified BIOS and force flashed it onto the spare parts motherboard. The instant the flash completed, the system bricked. Okay, whatever...
      Then I desoldered the chip from the donor board and soldered it onto my motherboard. Success! It was a happy day for me, but I also learned just how tricky it can be to modify a BIOS, especially with a utility with a piss poor Chinese to English translation.

    • @southernflatland
      @southernflatland Před rokem

      @Will Hike I actually was adding a new feature, I was changing my BIOS boot logo image to be an identity photo and return information if found stolen.
      Aside from that, there was also another reason to update my BIOS anyways. Some particular issue with a certain brand of LCD's caused the BIOS to falsely get reflashed to garbage data if the screen brightness was turned below 50%, something to do with piss poor voltage management on the particular brand LCD end somehow sending a high enough residual current to the BIOS chip to falsely trigger reflashing mode.
      So yeah, update your BIOS if you need new features, but also update your BIOS if it fixes known issues which might turn your equipment into a brick just from changing backlight brightness or some other random everyday activity.

    • @southernflatland
      @southernflatland Před rokem

      @Will Hike Hah, now I wish I could on my old Dell B130, but I can't. The battery is shot and it won't allow a BIOS update with a faulty battery, and I ain't about to buy a battery for that old thing now. Hey, as long as it still works at least, not like I take it anywhere anyways. 🤷‍♂️

    • @SoggySage
      @SoggySage Před rokem

      I should've come to this video sooner. I've upgraded my BIOS through holding down Windows+B on startup. It booted up but nothing is responding. The taskbar isn't working, Windows startup isn't working. I've forcefully restarted it but no luck. I'm an idiot for not doing proper research on it.

    • @southernflatland
      @southernflatland Před rokem

      @@SoggySage Some boards/BIOSes have what they call a 'boot block protection' feature, where it can reflash the BIOS from a specially made USB flash drive with the BIOS file having a particular exact filename, specific to each board though.
      That particular failsafe mode doesn't even turn on the display though, and it only works if the flash drive is prepared EXACTLY right and also must be plugged into USB port number 0, whichever port the manufacturer decided to designate as USB 0 anyways.
      With the screen not even turned on, you can't do squat nor can you see the status.
      For older boards with this feature, the flash drive is basically supposed to be configured as an automatic bootable DOS compatible flash drive with the BIOS installer utility and BIOS file, preconfigured to run the utility silently from the AUTOEXEC.BAT file.
      Newer boards might be happy with just the BIOS file itself and may contain its own reflashing utility built in.
      Any which way you go with that method can be a pure headache as you can't see what the system is even doing, and it takes some time too. Also the hotkey for that mode varies from one manufacturer to another.

  • @johnthomas4551
    @johnthomas4551 Před 2 lety +1

    Wow! Your the best Ive ever heard. Im a total Noob at 40 years old. Just trying to tinker a little as a hobby but. I want to learn everything you know. So thoughtful and thorough liked and subscribed. You’re the man keep it up!

  • @SupIds
    @SupIds Před 3 lety +220

    BIOS update: *Exists*
    HP support that comes preinstalled: Update?

    • @huss2891
      @huss2891 Před 3 lety +4

      that happened to me and i updated

    • @jmooroof1769
      @jmooroof1769 Před 3 lety

      @@binku09 nothing

    • @thegreatali5015
      @thegreatali5015 Před 3 lety +2

      I KNOW REALLY I had a bios update for like months but the update is like a few mb and I'm like you want me to update my BIOS for only a few mb? Yea if it ain't broke don't mess with it and I'm not gunna do it!

    • @thegreatali5015
      @thegreatali5015 Před 3 lety +1

      This is from hp support xD

    • @Mageman17
      @Mageman17 Před 3 lety +1

      I've been lucky so far with HP BIOS updates and their UEFI diagnostics updates on my laptop.
      I'd like to give a shoutout to Toshiba, though. Delivered a BIOS update, update tool seemed to hang while install and I foolishly cut the power and hard restarted. Had to convince the owner that the laptop (early Win 7 era, so 1st gen core i processor) couldn't handle Windows 8 and seemingly went no display in the process.

  • @shailkamtikar2268
    @shailkamtikar2268 Před 3 lety +326

    Me: updated bios in every single device.
    Next minute: ThioJoe's video is posted 😂😂

    • @arnob1711
      @arnob1711 Před 3 lety +5

      Cap

    • @BlazeYT_
      @BlazeYT_ Před 3 lety +4

      *"Bro that's cap"*

    • @andricode
      @andricode Před 3 lety +1

      _I love when you comment Big Cappa_
      _Throw your hands in the air if you's a true player_
      (Original song: The Notorious B.I.G - Big Poppa)

    • @0iq451
      @0iq451 Před 3 lety

      Cap

    • @th1nhhdk
      @th1nhhdk Před 3 lety

      R/thathappened

  • @picblick
    @picblick Před rokem +2

    The introduction of dual BIOS really put my mind at ease during these tense minutes.
    I flashed many many times because I worked as a technician for a while and only one something happened and it was recoverable.
    As basic as BIOS was and UEFI is, it probably is one of the most stable pieces of code inside your machine.
    But ever since two chips are common it really feels so much better to update them, I cannot understate it enough.
    Maybe it's an irrational fear, just like meteorites and the sun burning out, but as long as there is a solution like this, I'm happy.
    Great video btw!

    •  Před 11 měsíci +1

      Don't always rely on that. I remember buying an Aorus motherboard with a few years ago and I had to update it. The update failed and the feature was worthless because the stupid thing wrote the update to BOTH chips, with no option to change the behaviour. Fortunately I got a refund.

  • @ame0savr0s
    @ame0savr0s Před rokem +22

    Had to update my BIOS because my cpu wasn't supported . I have to say it was pretty smooth and had no problem with post or anything. I feel kinda lucky now that I know that BIOS updates could be potentially harmful

    • @sebastianb5997
      @sebastianb5997 Před rokem

      by chance was it a 13th gen intel cpu? I'm using a 13700k with a ASUS TUFF gaming wifi plus z690 d4 motherboard and XMP doesnt work so I can put ram to the right speed or overclock the cpu and I need a BIOs update but I'm scared to do it because of the risks

    • @thegrandtemslayr1384
      @thegrandtemslayr1384 Před rokem +1

      @@sebastianb5997 shouldn't be. Bios updates for compatibility aren't that bad. Also, you can always send it back to the manufacturer and ask them update the BIOS for you.

  • @Windows11Pro22
    @Windows11Pro22 Před 3 lety +104

    **this is why I always keep my laptop battery at 100% while updating the BIOS**

    • @NotAriieFluffie
      @NotAriieFluffie Před 3 lety +7

      why keep it on 100% if you can plug it in permanently?

    • @Windows11Pro22
      @Windows11Pro22 Před 3 lety +2

      @@NotAriieFluffie it’s a laptop...

    • @heynic37
      @heynic37 Před 3 lety +19

      @@Windows11Pro22 Woah, your laptop ejects the power cable if it's fully charged?
      Battery could still do a random failure just because you have bad luck

    • @JustYourAverageBronyaEnjoyer
      @JustYourAverageBronyaEnjoyer Před 3 lety +15

      My laptop refused to BIOS update UNLESS it was plugged into AC.

    • @YuukiHotaruu
      @YuukiHotaruu Před 3 lety +3

      @@JustYourAverageBronyaEnjoyer old Dell latitude will refuse to update the BIOS if the laptop NOT plugged in to AC and have at least 20% of charge in the battery

  • @shanesrandoms
    @shanesrandoms Před 3 lety +180

    It's an EEPROM using a SPI interface 😀
    Older ones back in the day would've been EEPROM or EPROM using 8/16bit parallel data IO.
    SPI is a protocol like USB is protocol
    EEPROM is like the medium.
    Enjoy your videos 👍😀

    • @tobiwonkanogy2975
      @tobiwonkanogy2975 Před 3 lety +1

      Super Powerful Injector Eeproms . jk i have no clue

    • @victorlacerda9659
      @victorlacerda9659 Před 3 lety +8

      As u said it's a simple EEPROM that can be write using a simple arduino or any microcontroller, this computer isn't so hard to fix it.
      I think i could give a try on this, there is a lot of tutorials on internet how to use external EEPROM or SPI on Arduino and soo u could use it to fix.
      Tip: only think u need to see is if the BIOS file downloaded is a simple RAW or if is compacted.

    • @mustafacanaydn3872
      @mustafacanaydn3872 Před 3 lety +2

      yeah u can program bios with Eeprom programmers that are used in arduinos. Hardest part is desoldering and soldering of the chip from the motherboard

    • @christopheralbano3570
      @christopheralbano3570 Před 3 lety +6

      @@tobiwonkanogy2975 EEPROM is a type of programmable read only memory. It's magical because you can rewrite it, and all that is needed to write is a carefully controlled overvoltage (typically the circuitry for that is internal to the IC). EPROM was rewritable, but you had to expose the EPROM IC's memory section to UV light for a period to erase the old program first.
      SPI is magical because it is much easier to do the signal integrity stuff for a data/clock pair than for 8 or 16 parallel lines, and it's still very fast.

    • @christopheralbano3570
      @christopheralbano3570 Před 3 lety +2

      @@victorlacerda9659 There is a little more to flashing the bios memory than just talking at it over SPI. You would have to read through the specific IC's datasheet to figure out the process and write a driver to handle the flashing process. It's a little work, but it isn't too bad once you are going... Chances are if you know enough to do that quickly, your time is worth enough that you are better off paying the manufacturer a little to fix it for you instead... unless you are just doing it for the fun/challenge.

  • @armagedon515
    @armagedon515 Před rokem +81

    If you are updating your bios from a USB port in BIOS mode, do not use a USB3 port as there is no support for that in the BIOS. More recent MBs do provide basic support for it but it is better to use an old USB2 port to update the bios.

  • @ethanhayes
    @ethanhayes Před rokem

    I had an HP laptop, purchased c2010, which had this curious problem of turning off when it got too warm. Depending on conditions, it sometimes happened only a couple minutes after startup. Using a cooling desk (USB-powered) mitigated this in many cases, but not all, like when heavily using production software or following several boots in a row (making it a vicious cycle). I found upon research that this was a cooling configuration problem with the BIOS, which an update fixed. The update utility (which I used within Windows) was incredibly janky-looking, as if they didn't expect the average user to have to do it. Nothing like the slick, branded update tool you showed, so I'm glad to see the progress. What I found most intriguing about this is that a BIOS problem actually affected normal computer use, not just the startup procedure.

  • @ShowSlideProductions
    @ShowSlideProductions Před 2 lety +60

    In bringing my journey one step closer to getting a 5000 series AMD CPU, I had to update my BIOS... Except that it was on such old firmware that I couldn't just update it, I had to do about two updates before it would finally install the update that I needed. I'm pretty sure the combined stress from watching the progress bar slowly go up multiple times has taken at least a year away from my life.

  • @minisaiju7699
    @minisaiju7699 Před 3 lety +119

    How to double your bios for free.

  • @LordANIK
    @LordANIK Před 11 měsíci

    Got so many information regarding this. Keep up the Good work!

  • @kuugoriver
    @kuugoriver Před rokem +23

    as we say in Brazil "don't mess around with what's working" if it's functional let it be

    • @DimzReacts
      @DimzReacts Před rokem +15

      "if it ain't broke, don't fix it"

    • @Pdor_figlio_di_Kmer
      @Pdor_figlio_di_Kmer Před rokem

      @@Turhan-Bey Nope, the exact quote is: If it ain't broken, mess with it until it breaks.

    • @Pdor_figlio_di_Kmer
      @Pdor_figlio_di_Kmer Před rokem

      That's a pretty much planetary-wide proverb. It may vary in its wording from place to place, but the gist is to let working things THE HELL ALONE.

    • @powerpc6037
      @powerpc6037 Před rokem +1

      That's the reason why I'm still running Windows 7 on my 12 year old gaming pc and Windows Updates turned OFF since the first week I got it. I don't see any reason to turn them on since my system is still working fine without any updates for 12 years.

    • @Pdor_figlio_di_Kmer
      @Pdor_figlio_di_Kmer Před rokem

      @@powerpc6037 What a coincidence. Me too.
      I bought this PC with a G1840 Celeron and 4Gb DDR3 RAM at more or less the time Win 8 got out, but insisted to get Win 7 32bit instead. In time I've upgraded this rig to i5 and 16Gb Ram, but Win 7 has remained, still rock solid.
      It is not that I don't want to go to Win 10 or 11, it's I don't need to go over there, for the moment.

  • @solen1849
    @solen1849 Před 2 lety +9

    GREAT video, really well made. Thank you for all the excellent info. Glad you take the time (no matter how long it takes to explain) to really cover everything about what you are talking about. Seems like other youtubers are so focused on " THIS VIDEO HAS TO BE 10 MINUTES, OR 5 MINUTES E.T.C" . Your videos never feel rushed, and by the end i am usually always surprised how long the video was lol.

  • @ICDisappear
    @ICDisappear Před 3 lety +84

    Just don’t update the bios if you live in Texas and it’s snowing

  • @CMDPromptify
    @CMDPromptify Před 2 lety

    Great video! A BIOS update has been super helpful with poopychoppy Bluetooth audio connection. It wasn't the primary reason for running the operation, but man what a difference.

  • @CoatsandGaiters
    @CoatsandGaiters Před rokem

    Superbly presented video with a brilliant manner and fully detailed.

  • @byrd203
    @byrd203 Před 3 lety +98

    some models Joe have the CMOS battery intergraded into the battery pack that you normally use to run the laptop or just run off the laptop its self

    • @encycl07pedia-
      @encycl07pedia- Před 3 lety +5

      integrated* itself*

    • @danman32
      @danman32 Před 3 lety +3

      In that case a capacitor on the MB can be used to continue providing power to the CMOS. Really though, the CMOS power should only be needed for the clock. Everything else should be non-volatile, with the jumper doing an explicit clear.

    • @arthurmann578
      @arthurmann578 Před 3 lety +2

      For some strange reason, if I unplug the battery from my old Dell laptop, the CMOS battery will become fully drained in a few days and I have to replace it and re-update the BIOS settings again so I just always leave it plugged in and charged. Strange. It acts like the CMOS battery is the backup for the main one. You would think it should be the opposite. 🤔

    • @byrd203
      @byrd203 Před 3 lety +2

      @@arthurmann578 some laptops need the second battery isa there a round spot on the laptop big battery if so a second builtin battery is needed which is the big battery which second ceos in it

    • @TheExileFox
      @TheExileFox Před 3 lety

      @@arthurmann578 no. In this case it would be one chip that permanently holds a default version and any updates and settings are stored on this other chip, which is volatile. So this second chip always needs power to remember anything.

  • @Endar92
    @Endar92 Před 3 lety +24

    You absolutely need to update your bios. If you are on AMD the bios update contains important cpu microcode update, too which highly recommended to install for performance and optimizations. All modern motherboards and laptops have a way too recover from a corrupted bios so it is not that of a big deal. Plus, you can actually install updates from the bios itself which reduces crash possibilities.

    • @Redmanticore
      @Redmanticore Před 11 měsíci

      except when your bios update starts rebooting your pc for no reason and getting old bios update doesn't help for some reason (no bsod, no minidump). happened to some guy on newest lenovo laptop JUCN59WW update for Legion 5 15ARH7H/Legion R7000P ARH7H/Legion R7000 ARH7H/Legion 5 15ARH7/Legion R7000P ARH7/Legion R7000 ARH7/Legion 5 Pro 16ARH7H/Legion R9000P ARH7H/Legion 5 Pro 16ARH7/Legion R9000P ARH7.
      I'm not updating bios for some 5% processor gains or whatever.

  • @larrybonner6947
    @larrybonner6947 Před 2 lety

    Extremely informative. Excellent presentation. I have been thoroughly enlightened.

  • @bittertruth6175
    @bittertruth6175 Před rokem

    Extremely important. Presented very well. Thanks

  • @clashofpoke
    @clashofpoke Před 3 lety +5

    I've been looking for a video like this for SO long! And now one of my fav tech youtubers made one! Thank you so much!

  • @ApfelJohannisbeere
    @ApfelJohannisbeere Před 3 lety +24

    So far I had not 'bricked' any BIOS and what you missed is that there are usually options to save the current BIOS. A really good tip is (especially for Modem Firmware/BIOS) that you reset to the default settings and then flash the BIOS/Firmware and after flashing resetting again to the default settings. Some programmers haven't tested the setting or introduced new settings and if there was a change in the configuration or some situation not tested that may lead to problems with the BIOS!
    Also always have your laptop etc on full loaded battery and per cable to power connected. If on PC if possible, plug in the PC to an UPS (Uninterrupted Power Supply).
    In your case with the USB not functioning that may be due the BIOS not in the expected (maybe even specific named) directory or put into the root of the BIOS and thus not find and stops.
    In some cases, what could help is use the procedure for 'resetting the BIOS' to the 'default setting'.
    Furthermore, in some cases a BIOS update is as well needed for newer drivers. I had in cases of HP with Windows Updates that the BIOS needed to be on a certain version or else it wouldn't update the new Feature Update.
    What's pretty common is that for newer CPUs there is a BIOS update needed or not even boot with the newer CPU.
    Some newer drivers expect a newer Firmware/BIOS and if not get, not functions.

  • @Glock27gunner
    @Glock27gunner Před měsícem

    Really great rundown on BIOS and potential issues.

  • @derryoneill9484
    @derryoneill9484 Před 2 lety

    Oh this brings back memories. For the record, the clip you showed that clips onto the top of an SPi Chip is known as a SOIC clip

  • @abhisthkhantwal9952
    @abhisthkhantwal9952 Před 3 lety +40

    this person is having a unique sense of humor which not everyone can understand. *"NOICE"*

  • @turrihurri
    @turrihurri Před 3 lety +133

    i got a bios update in windows update lol. I updated it but everything is fine

    • @YasiThoughts
      @YasiThoughts Před 3 lety +3

      🤣

    • @ThioJoe
      @ThioJoe  Před 3 lety +59

      Hm surprising

    • @GoatStormChaser
      @GoatStormChaser Před 3 lety +37

      Lol once my bios updated automatically on my very expensive dell gaming pc and it gave me an heart attack luckily everything went fine

    • @yeppiidev
      @yeppiidev Před 3 lety +3

      dont say you got free Minecraft while updating window because Microsoft had an offer.

    • @Poifix
      @Poifix Před 3 lety +7

      Wth? Windows actually does that?
      What kind of special computer do you have. Never heard of that before. Sounds super risky.

  • @CheesyX2
    @CheesyX2 Před rokem +4

    Very nice and informative video, may i add that on AMD Ryzen CPU's a UEFI Update can actually make a difference in Performance and/or Power-Consumption because of the AMD AGESA. The difference can be none at worst but game-changing on some motherboards with very early UEFI's.

  • @caramidacaramida3959
    @caramidacaramida3959 Před 11 měsíci

    Very useful, i learn new stuff all the time thenk you for taking the time to make this videos

  • @rainbot32
    @rainbot32 Před 3 lety +35

    6:40 except when it does.
    Especially recently on Ryzen systems, there's been a lot of important updates delivered on BIOS updates, like better memory compatibility, tuning of frequency scaling, the recent USB dropping out issue on last gen Zen. Hell, even support for newer gen CPUs on older chipsets.
    Some security patches have also been delivered on BIOS updates.

    • @jacobrodrigues6754
      @jacobrodrigues6754 Před 2 lety

      _Windows Denfender Is Good Though_

    • @jacobrodrigues6754
      @jacobrodrigues6754 Před 2 lety

      _eeeeeeeee ksjsisisueuejeiwjejej_

    • @jacobrodrigues6754
      @jacobrodrigues6754 Před 2 lety

      _My pc Disk GB is 10000000000000000000000000_

    • @sharanoth
      @sharanoth Před rokem +3

      @ImNotBooboobear That's a fat lie and you know it.

    • @SirFaceFone
      @SirFaceFone Před rokem +6

      @ImNotBooboobear Maybe in 2009. Defender is leaps and bounds better than it was a decade ago, when it gained its bad reputation. It's more than enough for most users, and even faster than third-party solutions nowadays.

  • @natemasterson7274
    @natemasterson7274 Před 3 lety +24

    one important thing to note about the cpu vulnerabilities fixes would be that some would chose not to do it because of potential performance impacts some have had on systems. which is indeed a worthy consideration if a person knows they will never be put in the position to be vulnerable anyway.

    • @jonb695
      @jonb695 Před rokem +1

      Assuming the user is keeping their OS up to date, those vulnerability updates will be forced on them anyway. Windows and Linux can load CPU microcode at run-time.

  • @markstevens5442
    @markstevens5442 Před 2 měsíci

    Just updated mine successfully last week after seeing your Logo Fail Video - The latest BIOS with the fix was available online for download :)

  • @xselimxxjd
    @xselimxxjd Před rokem

    This video helped me learning about UEFI and BIOS lot, tysm ❤️

  • @SingingWrens
    @SingingWrens Před 3 lety +14

    I truly do appreciate the videos you make, they've helped me rediscover my love for computers and how they work

  • @krambis7721
    @krambis7721 Před 3 lety +21

    If it works, I don't touch it, unless there is a huge security flaw to be patched.

    • @AlfaPro1337
      @AlfaPro1337 Před 3 lety +1

      "uGh, bUt iT'S nEwEr & BeTteR!" - Most of the tech YTbers.

    • @kalidesu
      @kalidesu Před 3 lety +1

      Meltdown and Spectre?

    • @ivo3598
      @ivo3598 Před 2 lety

      Or fixing bsod

  • @KekTekDe
    @KekTekDe Před 2 lety +4

    5:20
    SPI is just the interface. Those chips are typically EEPROMs (or flash, it's kinda the same) and are using SPI for communication

    • @rfvtgbzhn
      @rfvtgbzhn Před 9 dny

      Flash is a kind of EEPROM. Flash is faster, but unlike "conventional" EEPROM it can only be erased in blocks, if you want to erase just a single bit, you need to store the whole block memory or a dedicated cache, erase the whole block and then rewrite it. Erasing in this case means changing an altered bit to it's out-of-the-box state (usually this is defined as a 1, so 0 -> 1 is erasing while 1 -> 0 is writing).

  • @uzaiyaro
    @uzaiyaro Před rokem +8

    For me, I always keep my bios/UEFI updated as security vulnerabilities aren’t unheard of, nor are bugs or missing hardware support. While I like to live dangerously, I’d still probably only recommend doing it if you have a reason to. Those reasons are generally given in the release notes.

    • @schwingedeshaehers
      @schwingedeshaehers Před 11 měsíci

      It depends on the operating systems. There are operating systems, that chelc for these (known) vulnerabilitys at install time, and if found, will apply a software fix to prevent it. (May not the most efficient method, but easier)

    • @aqansari
      @aqansari Před 7 měsíci

      I have 7 bios updates available for my motherboard, can I install latest one?
      or I need to install all of them in order?
      (msi A320-A pro max)

  • @rarapas
    @rarapas Před 3 lety +33

    I find that with old flash drives, like 256MB FAT, with a read/write led I have more chances of success on recovering from corrupt bioses. Also, it may be that you have to use a specific USB port for it to work. I was successful with quite a few desktops and laptops that had a built it recovery quite easily. My favourite fix is a compaq laptop though, with corrupt bios. It would go into bios settings but could not see any drives (it could not recognise the drives properly- it would display junk data there), nor did usb work to boot. I couldn't use DOS to flash, even tried a usb floppy drive-sometimes that works btw. With no other visual recovery mode, it had a key combo (ctrl alt esc and B?) that low level turned it on, no display, and looked for a specific BIOS filename on a FAT partitioned USB drive. If it found the correct filename, it would beep *loudly* several times and flash it. That worked. Generally if the boot block (the "slow portion flashing" on your video is intact, there's hope. Some flash programs do that writing at the very end, after the main block is flashed successfully. It depends on the bios.
    Try another usb stick configuration and different bios images! I'd suggest the one it initially had, if possible.

  • @echeese63
    @echeese63 Před 2 lety +15

    That USB flash program tool (ch341a) is actually super easy to use, and you don't need to de-solder anything.
    Also, I'm 90% sure you could fix that laptop with it.

  • @igorpankov8237
    @igorpankov8237 Před rokem +1

    great piece thanks

  • @MC-ExcaliburProject
    @MC-ExcaliburProject Před rokem

    New info unlocked. Thanks!

  • @rpst39
    @rpst39 Před 3 lety +15

    When I first updated my bios a few hours after building my pc I used gigabyte's bios update app. It didn't restarted the pc properly so it got stuck on a black screen. After a few hours I hit the restart button on my case and it rebooted normally. It was very scary almost bricking my new motherboard. Now I learned my lesson, never update bios on windows.

  • @alleviated_
    @alleviated_ Před 3 lety +14

    I needed this video because i was going to do it, thx

  • @nicholashylton6857
    @nicholashylton6857 Před rokem

    Wow! This is super old school! The Last time I had someone soldering In new hardware onto my computer motherboard was back in the '90s.

  • @stevehill5637
    @stevehill5637 Před 8 měsíci

    Great presentation, Sir.
    I really enjoy your content.

  • @TheNikjay
    @TheNikjay Před 3 lety +169

    Updating bios today is much safer compared to back in the day. I just updated my bios for the first time and i could feel the increase of stability right away mostly in my games and fps

    • @BrooklynBalla
      @BrooklynBalla Před 2 lety +25

      @Bob Thompson It improved the efficiency of how your components communicate with each other and could have also improved the power delivery to your CPU.

    • @BrooklynBalla
      @BrooklynBalla Před 2 lety +1

      @vipex Does it have flashback?What motherboard brand and model is it?

    • @lisuraoi
      @lisuraoi Před 2 lety

      @vipex That's sad.. then the only way to fix it is by flashing the bin file to the chip.

    • @FatheredPuma81
      @FatheredPuma81 Před 2 lety +20

      Also known as placebo.

    • @mikimouse3001
      @mikimouse3001 Před 2 lety +8

      What you talking about, the BIOS isn't running your games lol , after the windows is initialized the BIOS chip is turned off.

  • @KhaledAlfaris
    @KhaledAlfaris Před 3 lety +128

    Great video

    • @V-for-Vendetta01
      @V-for-Vendetta01 Před 3 lety +1

      I remember watching Mr bean on your you channel lmao

    • @KhaledAlfaris
      @KhaledAlfaris Před 3 lety

      @@V-for-Vendetta01 lol, it got removed due to copyrights

    • @V-for-Vendetta01
      @V-for-Vendetta01 Před 3 lety

      @@KhaledAlfaris yea F

    • @KhaledAlfaris
      @KhaledAlfaris Před 3 lety

      @Ojas ok, thanks.

    • @sthondat17
      @sthondat17 Před 3 lety +1

      There could have been no better argument for not needlessly updating your BIOS than bricking a laptop in the video. Good job, ThioJoe!

  • @user-cx2bk6pm2f
    @user-cx2bk6pm2f Před 2 lety

    Great advice as always! Listen to this guy, seriously!

  • @VersionBest
    @VersionBest Před 2 lety

    This was great. Thank you.

  • @KevinDlt
    @KevinDlt Před 3 lety +15

    I updated my BIOS and when my PC restarted, for a few moments it made strange noises and screenshots and I was very scared. Fortunately everything went well xd

    • @Maciek2846
      @Maciek2846 Před 2 lety +7

      And I thought my laptop is gonna explode during a bios update because the fans were on full speed (I mean they were loud as hell)

  • @AsrielDreemurrPlays
    @AsrielDreemurrPlays Před 3 lety +77

    though I think this is a great video that really goes into detail how much engineering and delicacy goes into the BIOS/UEFI system, I still think it's fear mongering a bit. yes, the wisdom is "if it ain't broke don't fix it" and it's still possible to brick a bios if you're not careful, but this isn't the early 2000s (back when BIOS was actually used) where if your bios updated breaks you're SOL, manufactures have a bunch of safeguards in place (and even the manufactures of like the psu and what not) if your power cuts out during an update, if the power comes back on quickly it's fine (capacitor buffer commonly found in the PSU) as mentioned there's a dual bios mode. However I think the real MVP of BIOS recovery options is the cold flash features. this will be different dependent on company but my motherboard (Gigabyte B550 Aorus Master) as a feature where a single USB port can flash the BIOS, it doesn't matter if the bios itself is working, as long as the computer is powered off and plugged in it'll reflash the BIOS (i've had other motherboards from the likes of asrock and asus, and they seem to also have similar features when it comes to recovery)
    tl;dr: it's still possible to brick a BIOS but the possibility of it happening is so small it's negligible

  • @JeremyFixIt
    @JeremyFixIt Před 2 lety

    I was watching this while my brand new pc was updating the bios... So glad nothing went wrong!

  • @Bianchi77
    @Bianchi77 Před 2 lety

    Nice info,thanks for sharing :)

  • @MentaL65535
    @MentaL65535 Před 3 lety +56

    Your recovery tool was most likely crashing because you were using too big of a usb drive, regardless if you formated it in the required partition . Anything larger than 4 GB is usually gonna be problematic. Try to use a USB stick 4 GB or smaller and I'm pretty confident it will work.

    • @mvsv12
      @mvsv12 Před 3 lety +8

      That make sense. Maybe the recovery tool is written in 32 bit and a drive larger that 4 GB cause an overflow or a memory leak and the tool crashes

    • @Vysair
      @Vysair Před 3 lety

      Wtf that was super bad. Who even has 4GB stick these day. Even mine is at least 8GB. It will be harder to find 4GB in the future too

    • @MentaL65535
      @MentaL65535 Před 3 lety +7

      @@Vysair technically you can low level format a stick of large capacity to look like a small capacity one for the host system. The thing is that in time most hosts will support modern large capacity drives, but till that time comes, you either use a small capacity drive (4 Gb max), or format a large one to look like a 4 Gb drive.

    • @RemziCavdar
      @RemziCavdar Před 2 lety +3

      And also format it as FAT.

    • @bernardonegri5416
      @bernardonegri5416 Před rokem

      The tool itself wrote to the pendrive. You'd think they at least would show an error in that case.

  • @AkaObbies
    @AkaObbies Před 3 lety +46

    My computer sounds like a tornado when it does a bios update.

    • @thiagoschp
      @thiagoschp Před 3 lety +24

      i suppose is because when updating, the bios is not running, so is incapable of sense temperatures, so it ramp up the fans to be safe

    • @ThatMfTaika
      @ThatMfTaika Před 3 lety +4

      That's my pc all the time because the sensors are dead and I manually ramped the fans to 100% to make sure my pc doesn't liquify itself. Yet somehow I can sleep through the Jet engine noises it makes

    • @AnomalyBreach
      @AnomalyBreach Před 3 lety +1

      my laptop sounds like a boeing 747 during a bios update

    • @thescreemregular5168
      @thescreemregular5168 Před 3 lety

      yeah my computer when a bios update is happing it is like a hurcane

    • @gerardonavarro3400
      @gerardonavarro3400 Před 3 lety

      @@ProtoV33MK1 thanks

  • @robbzooi
    @robbzooi Před rokem +7

    now I'm afraid to update my bios because a roommate has a talent for running the wrong combination of kitchen appliances that will pop the circuitbreaker at the exact wrong time, even though it happened countless times before and everyone in the house is aware of this problem

    • @Pdor_figlio_di_Kmer
      @Pdor_figlio_di_Kmer Před rokem +1

      Answer: buy an UPS. There are cheap ones out there, and it may be useful afterwards too.

    • @AlyssaNguyen
      @AlyssaNguyen Před rokem

      @@Pdor_figlio_di_Kmer
      What can brown do for you?
      j/k

    • @ratamacue0320
      @ratamacue0320 Před rokem

      Info: does your roommate sleep?

  • @starsnake8176
    @starsnake8176 Před 7 měsíci

    Very good video.
    I had a bios update crash on an hp pavilion laptop a few years ago. I had a backup of the bios on a 4gb flash drive and it worked just fine. I think I even remember reading thats its recomended to have the bios backup on a 4 gb drive because the bios can't handle more memory or something like that.

  • @qps9380
    @qps9380 Před 3 lety +20

    5:13 is incorrect. SPI is a communication protocol. The actual storage ICs are called an EEPROM.

    • @bozoqturkmni8137
      @bozoqturkmni8137 Před 2 lety

      I'm a non-native English speaker and thought when i was reading the titel of corruption = criminality :)) I've a question: I will upgrade my old Laptops with Wifi 6 Intel AX200 WLAN-Cards and maybe I will need patched BIOS' because of Lenovos Whitelist. I found a forum where some programmers fixing BIOS for "unlocking". this whitelist. Is it possible that they can spy my online banking data etc. if I install the patched BIOS from them? Sorry for my english.

    • @AuXXKeyz
      @AuXXKeyz Před 2 lety

      Ok

  • @oliversmeeton
    @oliversmeeton Před 3 lety +4

    In my experience on some laptops you have to use a specific USB port on the laptop for bios recovery also recommend just trying with a different USB drive as well.

  • @KiR_3d
    @KiR_3d Před rokem +1

    Thank you, ThioJoe! You've nailed the topic pretty well! I've didn't expected that you'll show how this HP laptop fails... It's sad actually! And opens my eyes on HP laptops and on other modern laptops as well! I will be searching for a real (deep) review of a laptop before buying it now. BGA chip flashdrive is the lamest decision I ever seen! I'm sure it gives great profits to HP of course :)

  • @FatheredPuma81
    @FatheredPuma81 Před 2 lety +61

    The biggest downside about the Dell recovery thing is that you need to own a Dell.

  • @JessicaFEREM
    @JessicaFEREM Před 3 lety +11

    I remember back in the early Days of ryzen, if your CPU wasn't supported in the current BIOS version, you'd have to get a loaner CPU from one of the companies to flash. these days though, most competent motherboards allow you to flash the BIOS without a CPU installed.

  • @samserious1575
    @samserious1575 Před 3 lety +68

    I remember my dad used a software on windows that changed some settings of the bios(UEFI actually) and basically corrupted it. Luckly the motherboard has dual bios on it and had an built in auto recovery program that resseted everything back to factory settings.

  • @BoraLevley
    @BoraLevley Před 2 lety +2

    My motherboard used to give warnings via ez debug leds, sometimes I felt something strange with the pc if leds was on, a quick restart was fixing it but I still didn't want it to happen, after a bios update its gone and my pc become more stable.

  • @Alexifeu
    @Alexifeu Před rokem +1

    I made a bios update yesterday on my MSI gaming PC and my pc didn't turn on so I took out my Gpu my cpu cooler and took out cmos battery, popped it back in and then I cleaned my whole PC and put on my new Thermal paste I bought but never used. And now everything is clean and it works again like a charm

  • @polponline1017
    @polponline1017 Před 3 lety +8

    I was searching for this video just now 😅

  • @DarkGamerA
    @DarkGamerA Před 3 lety +32

    my father once scolded me for updating bios after assembling my new pc myself

  • @epcapnimiYT
    @epcapnimiYT Před 2 lety +2

    I updated my bios and nothing happened to my bios but it currrupted my operating system. I was using windows 10

  • @Wrizzla
    @Wrizzla Před rokem +23

    Had to Update the BIOS of my Asus rog strix b450-f gaming ii yesterday so i can put in my 5600g and i have to say it was quite easy. Just put the recent Version on a USB Stick and then use the EZ BIOS Flash Tool that Asus offers in the BIOS itself. It may not be that easy on every MB just wanted to leave that here 👍

    • @thekidmanny377
      @thekidmanny377 Před rokem +2

      Did it run fine afterwards?

    • @Wrizzla
      @Wrizzla Před rokem +2

      @@thekidmanny377 yes, it runs perfectly fine. Had no Problems so far.

    • @beaumartin366
      @beaumartin366 Před rokem +2

      @@Wrizzla what size usb stick did you use? also did it happen to be usb 2.0 or 3.0?

    • @happytimes10191
      @happytimes10191 Před rokem +1

      @@beaumartin366 USB should be atleast 1GB, but the most important one is that IT SHOULD BE MBR FORMAT (google or youtube on how to reformat it into mbr).

    • @beaumartin366
      @beaumartin366 Před rokem

      @@happytimes10191 why not fat32?

  • @prodimitri1474
    @prodimitri1474 Před 3 lety +4

    I just fineshed uptating my BIOS and went on CZcams and this is the first video that in my recomendations bruh

  • @Charliefr3sh.
    @Charliefr3sh. Před 3 lety +12

    Bricked a bios once, back in the old days of removable EEPROM. I took it out, booted another similar mobo, took out its bios whilst it was on windows, installed the corrupted one and flashed it within windows and it worked

  • @scampbell8136
    @scampbell8136 Před rokem

    excellent , answered several questions I had about Lenovo BIOS result is I don't need to update it at all.

  • @hahaslav
    @hahaslav Před rokem +1

    I watched this video just before going to sleep. Then, I had a nightmare where I bricked my laptop. Thank you for the useful and interesting content.

  • @Arc_RL
    @Arc_RL Před 2 lety +6

    I remember 2 weeks ago since I got my new laptop there was an update that I didn't realize it has to do with the UEFI, it was too late to go back, I was so terrified if it was interrupted by something the I cant use it, but it finished without being interrupted & its a really good laptop & has all the hardware it needs to run Windows 11 :)

  • @Witt.
    @Witt. Před 3 lety +7

    Even if the computer/motherboard have a recovery tool, it still have a great chance to fail as demonstrated in the video. The most "safe" recovery tool is the Dual Bios system, where if somehow anything goes wrong you can switch to the backup bios, boot, switch again to the corrupted bios and reflash that bios. DO NOT TRY TO FLASH THE BACKUP BIOS, if you do this you are in risk of having 2 corrupted BIOS.

  • @tommyboywalker
    @tommyboywalker Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent video. I have successfully updated the BIOS for many years. That is until last night. On my Dell Inspiron 5510, the BIOS looked like it was going well until the black screen of death at the end and couldn't power up the computer. In a frenzy, I started pressing all combinations of things on the keyboard, with ac adapter plugged in and not. Don't recall exactly what I did but the system then began to power back up. It said BIOS CORRUPTED, AUTOMATIC BIOS RECOVERY STARTED. It must have had a backup of the original BIOS stored because it went back to the last loaded BIOS so all good. No more BIOS updates for me unless I understand that there is a good reason for doing so!

  • @Fearagen
    @Fearagen Před 2 lety +1

    100% Recommend a UPS. A battery that activates as soon as mains power is lost. Saves even your windows being slightly corrupted because of it being shut off when doing something important. Also saves work.