Hi
The BIOS on my Samsung R510 is faulty and causes major issues under ANY 64bit OS
As the laptop has 4G of RAM it' either I use 32bit OS and loose some or suffer the consequences
If the laptop if unplugged (or plugged in) this causes an instant reboot. I'm also unable to control the screen brighness.
I think the BIOS maybe using the 3-4GB range perhaps causing the reboot
As I said previously this effects all 64bit OSs (Vista and W7 included) and Samsung have shown no interest in fixing the problem
Is there a way to test out coreboot to see if it could replace my BIOS?
It's an Intel 4 series chipset.
Thanks in advance for any advice or pointers to HOWTOs you can provide
Cheers
Mike
Hello,
On Sat, 2009-07-04 at 09:17 +0100, Mike Lothian wrote:
Hi
The BIOS on my Samsung R510 is faulty and causes major issues under ANY 64bit OS
As the laptop has 4G of RAM it' either I use 32bit OS and loose some or suffer the consequences
If the laptop if unplugged (or plugged in) this causes an instant reboot. I'm also unable to control the screen brighness.
I think the BIOS maybe using the 3-4GB range perhaps causing the reboot
32 bit OSes are limited to 3GB, unless you are using a kernel with PAE support. This thread provides a quite good explanation: http://lists.us.dell.com/pipermail/linux-poweredge/2006-August/026795.html For more you can read the wikipedia page about PAE.
As I said previously this effects all 64bit OSs (Vista and W7 included) and Samsung have shown no interest in fixing the problem
Is there a way to test out coreboot to see if it could replace my BIOS?
Laptops are very tricky to work with, since they usually have some special chips (called ECs) which do all kind of funky stuff. Those are barely documented, if at all, so it's quite unlikely to support them, unless you can invest a few months/years of work to get it done... Coreboot is a work in progress, current versions work on a few dozens/hundreds of desktop boards, and most of the time with incomplete feature support, so don't expect too much of it either.
Also, you should be ready to hack your hardware (like soldering a socket onto it - http://www.coreboot.org/Soldering_a_socket_on_your_board), which will void your warranty, ofcourse.
Anyway, I didn't meant to discourage you. Feel free to browse our wiki and read some docs about porting coreboot to a new platform, maybe you will get prepared to do it, but only attempt to do it after you have a good backup plan and be aware of what can happen by reading the documentation first.
Here you have some links that worth reading: http://www.coreboot.org/Documentation http://www.coreboot.org/Supported_Chipsets_and_Devices http://www.coreboot.org/Developer_Manual
It's an Intel 4 series chipset.
Thanks in advance for any advice or pointers to HOWTOs you can provide
Cheers
Mike
Regards, Cristi