Roger said:
I personally don't upgrade a BIOS unless it fails to support a new CPU for example, or there's a known bug in the current version.
This is a very divisive topic among our community; some think that "if there's nothing to be gained, don't fix what ain't broke" and the other side wants the latest BIOS just in case there's some goodies in there that MIGHT help your performance.
I think regularly flashing the BIOS (just for the sake of having the latest, no definite tangible improvements) should be dependent upon the type of machine.
For mission-critical machines like servers (or relative's PCS
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), I say NEVER flash the BIOS unless there are real, tangible gains to be had. For personal/performance machines, then maybe that last BIOS upgrade will give you a few more CPU cycles or FPS to play with.
I've reported this story in the past, but here it is again. I was flashing the BIOS on my first server build and the power went out, something that rarely happens where I live. Luckily the UPS battery had enough juice to finish the install and shut down. The only benefit of the new BIOS was 64-bit support, which I have yet to use.
So, now, I'm in the "if it works don't fix it" camp.
Tony
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