On Wed, 8 Jan 2003, Antony Stone wrote:
Because they do not have a large enough capacity. Standard BIOS chips are 2megabits (= 32 kilobytes), which is not neough to hold a Linux kernel.
no 2 megabits is 256 kbytes. Still not enough for a kernel. Plenty for etherboot however.
You can program a Flash Rom chip on your motherboard - no external programmer needed - that's how you upgrade the BIOS even if you're not doing anything with LinuxBIOS.
my flash programmer has been on a shelf for two years now.
ron