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The Motherboard configuration is stored in the BIOS setup
BIOS configuration data is available in several different forms. This data is actively stored on the motherboard of each individual personal computer.
The related link has information on the Bios configuration to run the PCSX2 emulator.
In the BIOS setup program.
The Del key
H2 bios is a type of bios specifically made for notebooks.
boot priority in BIOS just specifies which drive or other boot able device to use first to boot from.
Bio's are memory, your system configuration which is made up of the binary codeYou can download the bios files for PS2 here if you own a PS2:http://mmm-downloads.at.ua/load/games/emulator_files/playstation_2_ps2_bios_and_firmware_files/18-1-0-6
BIOS configuration data is stored in CMOS memory. That is where all the basic hardware settings are kept. CMOS has traditionally been volatile memory, so a battery is required. Newer BIOSes often use NVRAM.
BIOS settings are irrelevant to Linux, except for the initial booting where the BIOS loads the bootloader from a medium, which in turn loads the Linux kernel. The only thing the kernel ever needs from the BIOS after that is to provide power management functions (ACPI). Thus, all settings not related to either booting or power management are ignored.
True. It will need to be changed.
List three ways in whicn configuration information can be stored in a motherboard