Curiosity and a little skill, when combined, can be a scary thing.
So randomly while killing time this morning (I was waiting for some delivery guys to show up.) I saw a video reviewing the intel arc GPU. Since the arc is one of the potential candidates when I build a future new computer, I wanted some insight into its performance. The dude mentioned some features including something called "re-bar" and that I might need to update my bios to make use of it. Which lead to a different video (same guy.) about bioses.
Which... kind of led to me checking, then updating my bios. I always get anxious at bedrock level software, largely cause my earliest attempts (thankfully, on far cheaper devices.) wound up in a couple of bricks. But flashing firmware and updating a bios are NOT the same thing, so it went well. And now my Prime B450 has re-bar support! So I turn it on, save and exit.
And almost immediately boot back into the bios. It can't find my boot drive. In fact, it only find 2 out of 4, and one of them is ******* mechanical!
Turn off re-bar, save and exit. I wind up back in the bios, BUT now it just wants me to specify the boot drive cause it can actually see the M2 I use.
I think the technical term for this kind of moment is "huhn... neat".
Turn on re-bar, save and exit then start poking around in the bios settings. Turns out that (for whatever reason, I don't know, and probably never will.) turning on re-bar was turning of CSM. But I managed to get both working, and here we are. Going to try some games later and see if there's any noticeable improvement on my old RX480, or at least less stuttering in sanctuary when I play fallout 4.
So, any one else got any stories to share?
Edit: with a full TWENTY MINUTES of gameplay to it's credit: there were no crashes, so... yay? Immediate observation indicates that load times might be a little better... maybe? But there's DEFINETLY an improvement in textures as there is WAY less pop in, on both loading screens and during gameplay. Controls feel a little tighter too, but that's probably an artifact.
So randomly while killing time this morning (I was waiting for some delivery guys to show up.) I saw a video reviewing the intel arc GPU. Since the arc is one of the potential candidates when I build a future new computer, I wanted some insight into its performance. The dude mentioned some features including something called "re-bar" and that I might need to update my bios to make use of it. Which lead to a different video (same guy.) about bioses.
Which... kind of led to me checking, then updating my bios. I always get anxious at bedrock level software, largely cause my earliest attempts (thankfully, on far cheaper devices.) wound up in a couple of bricks. But flashing firmware and updating a bios are NOT the same thing, so it went well. And now my Prime B450 has re-bar support! So I turn it on, save and exit.
And almost immediately boot back into the bios. It can't find my boot drive. In fact, it only find 2 out of 4, and one of them is ******* mechanical!
Turn off re-bar, save and exit. I wind up back in the bios, BUT now it just wants me to specify the boot drive cause it can actually see the M2 I use.
I think the technical term for this kind of moment is "huhn... neat".
Turn on re-bar, save and exit then start poking around in the bios settings. Turns out that (for whatever reason, I don't know, and probably never will.) turning on re-bar was turning of CSM. But I managed to get both working, and here we are. Going to try some games later and see if there's any noticeable improvement on my old RX480, or at least less stuttering in sanctuary when I play fallout 4.
So, any one else got any stories to share?
Edit: with a full TWENTY MINUTES of gameplay to it's credit: there were no crashes, so... yay? Immediate observation indicates that load times might be a little better... maybe? But there's DEFINETLY an improvement in textures as there is WAY less pop in, on both loading screens and during gameplay. Controls feel a little tighter too, but that's probably an artifact.
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