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Guest martinf
Posted

Until 2 weeks ago I had not heard of phoenix bios. Now every time I start up

my computer it is there. I always exit it without saving changes, but I don't

know what I am doing.

 

What is it and why is it there every time?

--

martinf

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Guest Mike M
Posted

Re: phoenix bios

 

The BIOS is the "glue" between your hardware and the software . BIOS

meaning Basic Input Output System. See

http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/B/BIOS.html for more details. The BIOS is a

set of instructions stored in a chip on your motherboard and also contains

some volatile information such as details of your hard drive and other

hardware together with the date and time. The fixed data is stored in ROM

however a small amount of volatile data is stored in CMOS RAM and requires

a small battery to power this.

 

Without knowing the message you are seeing it is difficult to know what is

happening but one possibility is that the battery has come to the end of

its life and needs replacing. When this happens the BIOS loses all of its

volatile settings and sets itself back to default. Perhaps that is what

is happening here. For example are you having to reset the time and date

after switching on your PC?

--

Mike Maltby

mike.maltby@gmail.com

 

 

martinf <martinf@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:

> Until 2 weeks ago I had not heard of phoenix bios. Now every time I

> start up my computer it is there. I always exit it without saving

> changes, but I don't know what I am doing.

>

> What is it and why is it there every time?

Guest Shane
Posted

Re: phoenix bios

 

Here's my guess, Mike. It was set to 'Silent' and it no longer is, so he

never used to see the bios at all. Obviously that is something the 'dying

battery' could cause. It almost seems too much of a coincidence, that the

*only* setting lost would be that one - but that would be to misunderstand

the nature of probabiility, wouldn't it? Or some 'knowledgeable friend'

changed it (the sort of thing I do, actually, but only for the duration of

the work - unless I forget to change it back, that is!). But one would

suppose the OP would have mentioned a friend having recently worked on it,

at least someone with the good sense to change nothing and ask what's going

on.

 

As with almost everything else (I seem to have let a virtually charmed life

<g>) I have never experienced a failing CMOS battery. All these hardware

issues (failing HDD, bad RAM et al) are going to hit me eventually, I just

know it! Probably all at once.

 

Shane

 

 

 

 

Mike M wrote:

> The BIOS is the "glue" between your hardware and the software . BIOS

> meaning Basic Input Output System. See

> http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/B/BIOS.html for more details. The BIOS

> is a set of instructions stored in a chip on your motherboard and

> also contains some volatile information such as details of your hard

> drive and other hardware together with the date and time. The fixed

> data is stored in ROM however a small amount of volatile data is

> stored in CMOS RAM and requires a small battery to power this.

>

> Without knowing the message you are seeing it is difficult to know

> what is happening but one possibility is that the battery has come to

> the end of its life and needs replacing. When this happens the BIOS

> loses all of its volatile settings and sets itself back to default.

> Perhaps that is what is happening here. For example are you having

> to reset the time and date after switching on your PC?

>

>> Until 2 weeks ago I had not heard of phoenix bios. Now every time I

>> start up my computer it is there. I always exit it without saving

>> changes, but I don't know what I am doing.

>>

>> What is it and why is it there every time?

Guest Mike M
Posted

Re: phoenix bios

 

>It was set to 'Silent' and it no longer is

 

Not a setting that exists on any boxes here so I always see some output

from the bios when booting but something that I think is present on most

of the family's laptops. What I do see occasionally is a message that

bios settings have changed and to ether press F1 (?) to continue or to

access the bios and check. This most often happens not because of any

problems with the battery but because I have opened the case and made some

hardware adjustment.

 

As for HDD problems, these are probably proportionate to the number of HDs

one has and currently having 15 HDs across 3 main desktop PCs (7 & 2x4)

it's perhaps not surprising that I have HD problems more often than most

although recently the problem on the oldest of those three boxes was a

failed SATA controller (motherboard roughly five years old) rather than

with the two disks attached to the controller. I've also had the odd fan

problem losing both a chipset and 12cm case fan on the oldest box in the

last six months.

 

As for battery problems - what battery problems? These I agree are rare

but remembering that Win Me is now seven years old and I would expect PCs

bought at that time to start having all manner of problems including

failing batteries.

--

Mike

 

 

Shane <shanebeatson@gmail.com> wrote:

> Here's my guess, Mike. It was set to 'Silent' and it no longer is, so

> he never used to see the bios at all. Obviously that is something the

> 'dying battery' could cause. It almost seems too much of a

> coincidence, that the *only* setting lost would be that one - but

> that would be to misunderstand the nature of probabiility, wouldn't

> it? Or some 'knowledgeable friend' changed it (the sort of thing I

> do, actually, but only for the duration of the work - unless I forget

> to change it back, that is!). But one would suppose the OP would have

> mentioned a friend having recently worked on it, at least someone

> with the good sense to change nothing and ask what's going on.

>

> As with almost everything else (I seem to have let a virtually

> charmed life <g>) I have never experienced a failing CMOS battery.

> All these hardware issues (failing HDD, bad RAM et al) are going to

> hit me eventually, I just know it! Probably all at once.

Guest N. Miller
Posted

Re: phoenix bios

 

On Tue, 17 Jul 2007 03:26:00 -0700, martinf wrote:

> Until 2 weeks ago I had not heard of phoenix bios. Now every time I start up

> my computer it is there. I always exit it without saving changes, but I don't

> know what I am doing.

>

> What is it and why is it there every time?

 

Phoenix has been providing the BIOS chips for Hewlett Packard since HP began

selling their Vectra line of computers in the early 1980s.

 

Something has changed, though. I don't recall ever having the BIOS screen

come up. At least not since I gave up the Vectras as boat anchors.

 

--

Norman

~Shine, bright morning light,

~now in the air the spring is coming.

~Sweet, blowing wind,

~singing down the hills and valleys.

Guest Shane
Posted

Re: phoenix bios

 

Mike M wrote:

>> It was set to 'Silent' and it no longer is

>

> Not a setting that exists on any boxes here so I always see some

> output from the bios when booting but something that I think is

> present on most of the family's laptops. What I do see occasionally

> is a message that bios settings have changed and to ether press F1

> (?) to continue or to access the bios and check. This most often

> happens not because of any problems with the battery but because I

> have opened the case and made some hardware adjustment.

>

 

No, I used to be unfamiliar with that setting.The last machine didn't have

it. Neither does this one, only this one does not give a bios read out at

boot up - apart from about 4 lines that you miss if you so much as think of

blinking. I'd turn it on if I could! But meanwhile, I have - between

purchasing the two machines - got so used to this setting that even though

neither has it, I think of it as the norm!

 

Anyway, its just a suggestion. Please don't imagine for a moment I'm

disagreeing with your own appraisal!

> As for HDD problems, these are probably proportionate to the number

> of HDs one has and currently having 15 HDs across 3 main desktop PCs

> (7 & 2x4) it's perhaps not surprising that I have HD problems more

> often than most although recently the problem on the oldest of those

> three boxes was a failed SATA controller (motherboard roughly five

> years old) rather than with the two disks attached to the controller.

 

Yes, welll, there are four HDs in here atm. There'd probably be more only

I'd have to start fitting controller cards. As it is I've got 2 optical

drives but only one plugged in, having run out of power leads. Its in there

as a spare nonetheless, or if I need two at once, in which case I can take

the side off and unplug one of the HDs temporarily. I guess it is logical

that failures are more likely with more drives - but equally that expecting

the worse increases too, so even if they don't fail it's almost as bad. Now

I can worry about a controller going too!

> I've also had the odd fan problem losing both a chipset and 12cm case

> fan on the oldest box in the last six months.

 

Yes. Fans. Incredibly cheap yet at times so hard to find replacements for! I

kept one going for years by taking it off and oiling it (WD40) every few

months. It did work, though. Until I just said enough is enough and binned

it.

>

> As for battery problems - what battery problems? These I agree are

> rare but remembering that Win Me is now seven years old and I would

> expect PCs bought at that time to start having all manner of problems

> including failing batteries.

 

I've seen plenty of *other* people's computers batterys going - just never

mine. In fact, I still have the case and a couple of parts of the old

machine and the CMOS battery is still there, still fine - and about 7 years

old! Perhaps I should take it out and keep it. Frame it. I feel it has given

me first rate service! I feel a little guilty discarding it.

 

 

Shane

>

>> Here's my guess, Mike. It was set to 'Silent' and it no longer is, so

>> he never used to see the bios at all. Obviously that is something the

>> 'dying battery' could cause. It almost seems too much of a

>> coincidence, that the *only* setting lost would be that one - but

>> that would be to misunderstand the nature of probabiility, wouldn't

>> it? Or some 'knowledgeable friend' changed it (the sort of thing I

>> do, actually, but only for the duration of the work - unless I forget

>> to change it back, that is!). But one would suppose the OP would have

>> mentioned a friend having recently worked on it, at least someone

>> with the good sense to change nothing and ask what's going on.

>>

>> As with almost everything else (I seem to have let a virtually

>> charmed life <g>) I have never experienced a failing CMOS battery.

>> All these hardware issues (failing HDD, bad RAM et al) are going to

>> hit me eventually, I just know it! Probably all at once.


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