Unfortunately no, the only way you could display the bios is by getting a new video card.
video adapter or graphics card. As most of the graphics card have its own bios available
BIOS of what component? your graphics card will have a BIOS, the CPU will have a BIOS. If there is nothing wrong with yours don't bother replacing it.
An AGP card is a graphics or display card, which allows your computer to display an output on a monitor. AGP stands for Accelerated Graphics Port.
A graphics card that fits into an internal slot on the motherboard. A basic graphics card is usually in a standard computer. A gaming computer will have a much more powerful graphics card, even one cooled by its own fan.
You'll have to go into your BIOS settings.
Yes, that is determined by the ports on your motherboard. Once you have a card that will work then you will go into the BIOS and disable the on-board graphics
a graphics processing unit or graphics card is the "device" that works with your CPU to display 3D and 2D graphics for various games and programs.
It's called either a video card, or a display graphics card.
Reinstall the drivers for your graphics card, and make sure that it is not overheating.
A graphics card can also be referred to as a GPU (Graphics Processing Unit), video card, or display adapter. These terms highlight its role in rendering graphics and processing visual data for display on monitors. In some contexts, it may also be called a graphics adapter, particularly in discussions about compatibility and connectivity.
If you go to your control panel and click on display settings there should be a drop-down menu that will list the name of your graphics card
Yes, but if there is no on board graphics, there will be no video, but yes, the computer will still run. Actually, many PCs will NOT run without some sort of video display device. The BIOS expects a video card, and failure to locate one will cause the system to fail POST and refused to boot. Some PCs (mostly servers) have a specialized BIOS that avoids this problem, and instead outputs the display via a serial port or (more commonly now) a specialized Management Controller chip. These systems no longer need any sort of video card to boot.