Hi
Matthias Wächter wrote:
On Wed, 10 Feb 1999, Eric R. Kern wrote:
This provides for plenty of code space, especially when you consider that modern EEPROMs shipping with systems are typically 512K bytes.
Sure? Does anyone have sort of a "table" showing which typical motherboard has which EEPROMs and its size?
I always thought of having only 128 kB of EEPROM memory. Well, if this would be 256 kB or even 512 kB (and, as you said, think of compression), then there would be no real need to have any code on the hard disk, I mean, to complete the BIOS code.
Well, this size ... could contain a miniature Linux kernel plus some applications to boot that system... oh, just a thought.
At 512k you could get a complete Linux Kernel in it....
Yours
Matthew