Upgrading & Fixing Laptops DUMmIES

(Darren Dugan) #1
BIOS within your laptop and replacing it with an updated version (or, rarely,
removing a corrupted version of the BIOS and replacing it with a clean copy).

This operation is very simple, but be very careful to follow the instructions of
the laptop maker or BIOS provider. If you go astray, you could end up in a sit-
uation where the BIOS is erased or corrupted and not getting far enough into
the system to load its replacement.

For most machines, the process involves downloading a new set of instruc-
tions and then copying them to a bootablefloppy disk drive. Then you shut
off the machine and boot from the floppy and install the new BIOS. In doing
so you run the machine at a very basic level, without Microsoft Windows or
other operating systems loaded. The fly in the ointment for many owners of
new laptops is that most no longer come equipped with a floppy disk drive.
Therefore, the process becomes a bit more complex. You may have to create
a bootableCD and include the BIOS update there, or you may be able boot
from an external device like a USB memory key.

I’m being purposely vague here because I want to make sure that you follow
the instructions for your particular machine and BIOS. Any author who claims
to tell you that there is one, single, all-purpose method to update the BIOS on
any laptop out in the field is... wrong.

Before you update any BIOS chips, make a copy of all of the entries on your
system’s CMOS Setup screen; in most cases, you have to resort to a pen and
notepad, although a handful of BIOS designs allow you to print their settings
or save them to a file.

Upgrading Motherboards and CPU............................................................


Tread carefully all ye who enter here. No law says you cannot upgrade a micro-
processor or even change the entire motherboard; if this were a book about
desktop computers, you would be ready right now to dive into a discussion of
opening the box, unscrewing hard drives and power supplies that are in the
way, and laying static-free hands on the motherboard or the microprocessor.

But... this book is about laptops. Though you can open the case, remove
drives, fans, and other components that are in the way, I don’t recommend
doing this yourself for several reasons:

Working within the close quarters of a laptop is a difficult task, requiring
above-average technical skills and at times the use of special tools.

Although laptops within a certain manufacturer’s family of devices may
use similar motherboards, there is no such thing as a generic laptop
board that fits into any case. You have to purchase an exact replacement

108 Part II: Explaining What Could Possibly Go Wrong

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