Welcome to Doom9's Forum, THE in-place to be for everyone interested in DVD conversion.

Before you start posting please read the forum rules. By posting to this forum you agree to abide by the rules.

 

Go Back   Doom9's Forum > Video Encoding > High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC)

Closed Thread
 
Thread Tools Display Modes

Mara found it in a box labeled “assorted returns” while clearing out the lab for a new contractor. She was an archivist of practical things, not emotions: firmware images on one shelf, encrypted keys in a drawer, a label maker that had lost its font. She liked artifacts that could be understood by opening them up. The board was a curiosity: Version 12500 BIOS. The engraving looked like a dare.

Confirm the prompt to begin the update. Alternative Method: Hardware USB FlashBack

You are experiencing random crashes, blue screens (BSOD), or failure to wake from sleep.

Once inside the BIOS, navigate to the (often by pressing F7 ). Locate the built-in flashing tool. Common names include: ASUS: EZ Flash 3 MSI: M-Flash Gigabyte: Q-Flash ASRock: Instant Flash

Intel CPUs have two key power limits: PL1 (the long-term sustained power limit) and PL2 (the short-term boost limit). A stock i5-12500 typically has a 65W PL1 and a ~117W PL2. Many enthusiast motherboards allow you to "unlock" these limits, allowing the CPU to maintain its ~4.1 GHz all-core boost for longer periods. In your BIOS, look for . Setting these higher (e.g., PL1 of 125W) can improve heavy multi-threaded performance but will increase temperatures.

: Never turn off your PC during the update process. A power loss during a BIOS flash can "brick" your motherboard. 4. Troubleshooting and Recovery If the update fails or your system becomes unstable:

Select the file from your USB and let the process complete. The system will reboot automatically. Discussion:

Version - 12500 Bios [repack] Full

Mara found it in a box labeled “assorted returns” while clearing out the lab for a new contractor. She was an archivist of practical things, not emotions: firmware images on one shelf, encrypted keys in a drawer, a label maker that had lost its font. She liked artifacts that could be understood by opening them up. The board was a curiosity: Version 12500 BIOS. The engraving looked like a dare.

Confirm the prompt to begin the update. Alternative Method: Hardware USB FlashBack version 12500 bios full

You are experiencing random crashes, blue screens (BSOD), or failure to wake from sleep. Mara found it in a box labeled “assorted

Once inside the BIOS, navigate to the (often by pressing F7 ). Locate the built-in flashing tool. Common names include: ASUS: EZ Flash 3 MSI: M-Flash Gigabyte: Q-Flash ASRock: Instant Flash The board was a curiosity: Version 12500 BIOS

Intel CPUs have two key power limits: PL1 (the long-term sustained power limit) and PL2 (the short-term boost limit). A stock i5-12500 typically has a 65W PL1 and a ~117W PL2. Many enthusiast motherboards allow you to "unlock" these limits, allowing the CPU to maintain its ~4.1 GHz all-core boost for longer periods. In your BIOS, look for . Setting these higher (e.g., PL1 of 125W) can improve heavy multi-threaded performance but will increase temperatures.

: Never turn off your PC during the update process. A power loss during a BIOS flash can "brick" your motherboard. 4. Troubleshooting and Recovery If the update fails or your system becomes unstable:

Select the file from your USB and let the process complete. The system will reboot automatically. Discussion:


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.