either replace the bios chip itself highly unlikely as most bios chips are soldered or get a new motherboard as its dead a failed bios is a dead board unless u replace the bios chip (if possbile)
When you FIRST power on your computer, you should see a flash logo or a flash screen that lists your brand of BIOS. You may be able to push DEL or F12 on initial boot to access the BIOS settings.
you much flash the bios.
Assuming you mean "flash the CMOS", when the CMOS settings are so messed up, you cannot access the BIOS.
We can't format bios.it is permanent program.we can flash the bios by upgrading bios update....By ---Rajesh Arthimalla.
No special action is needed. Windows 2000 supports APM (Advanced Power Management).
flash the bios
ctrl+alt+del doesn't recover anything. and you can use it only on windows, not on bios.
bios jumpers 1,2 are closed normal boot bios jumpers 2,3 are closed it resets power-on password and the supervisor password on reboot the only time to have all jumpers open is when you need to recover from a bad bios flash or you messed up your bios badly rests on reboot to know how to set jumpers see motherboard instructions
You can flash the BIOS. I wouldn't recommend it, as it won't give much of an improvement UNLESS you're experiencing BSOD, crashing, etc. If this is the case you can go to your motherboard manufacturers website and they should have a BIOS update you can d/l.
The key is different to what BIOS you have. If this is not to do with BIOS, and is a feature of Windows, (of which I have not played with...), it is most likely F8
That depends on the tool used to upgrade. Most tools provided by the manufacturer will not allow you to load an older version of the BIOS. A generic Flash utility may allow you to load an older version. Also, most Intel motherboards have a built-in BIOS repair tool that can load a BIOS from a floppy if the main BIOS is corrupted. This can usually be done safely with an older version of the BIOS.
Flash bios