08-08-2013, 04:42 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-08-2013, 06:03 AM by gygabyte666.)
I don't understand their reasoning for adding such security in their bios either. The only logical reasoning I can conclude from doing something like this is the benefit of repair costs if someone ends up bricking their system. I mean, HP is first and foremost a corporation and corporations seek money so, it makes the most sense to me. Still not a good enough reason to make people go through so much BS though.
Nice! Well, i'm glad something went right for a change. Now, i'm a bit confused. I dig a bit deeper into researching both IO APIC vs xAPIC and while I have a pretty solid idea of what IO APIC does, xAPIC on the other hand had virtually no information available about it. You claim that IO APIC only applies to WIN2k/WINXP. Does it affect WIN7/8? I'm currently running 7 and really don't want to hose my install if I don't absolutely have to. I'm like 70-80% sure that IO APIC is the one I was suggesting I do but i'm a bit paranoid. I just got this system and the last thing I need is to brick it. Especially, considering that something like this will most likely not be covered under my warranty and in fact will probably void it outright. I'm not even sure I should attempt this anymore. The risk might be too high for me. I'm fairly confident I can get OS X working fine without doing this. I already have it mostly setup after all. What are the benefits (if any) of doing something like this. What would you suggest in my place?
I apologize up front but I have no idea how to even enter these commands. I assume I need to enter an EFI shell of some kind but I don't have anything like that available to me ATM. Could you kindly point me to a guide or something similar? Should something go really, really wrong, are recovery options even available? That said, is enabling these reversible? Are there commands to disable them again if needed? Again, I apologize for all the questions but i'd rather be safe and well-informed than pretend to know everything and mess something up because I didn't bother to ask. >_<
Thank you very much though for all of your help. I greatly appreciate it!
Nice! Well, i'm glad something went right for a change. Now, i'm a bit confused. I dig a bit deeper into researching both IO APIC vs xAPIC and while I have a pretty solid idea of what IO APIC does, xAPIC on the other hand had virtually no information available about it. You claim that IO APIC only applies to WIN2k/WINXP. Does it affect WIN7/8? I'm currently running 7 and really don't want to hose my install if I don't absolutely have to. I'm like 70-80% sure that IO APIC is the one I was suggesting I do but i'm a bit paranoid. I just got this system and the last thing I need is to brick it. Especially, considering that something like this will most likely not be covered under my warranty and in fact will probably void it outright. I'm not even sure I should attempt this anymore. The risk might be too high for me. I'm fairly confident I can get OS X working fine without doing this. I already have it mostly setup after all. What are the benefits (if any) of doing something like this. What would you suggest in my place?
I apologize up front but I have no idea how to even enter these commands. I assume I need to enter an EFI shell of some kind but I don't have anything like that available to me ATM. Could you kindly point me to a guide or something similar? Should something go really, really wrong, are recovery options even available? That said, is enabling these reversible? Are there commands to disable them again if needed? Again, I apologize for all the questions but i'd rather be safe and well-informed than pretend to know everything and mess something up because I didn't bother to ask. >_<
Thank you very much though for all of your help. I greatly appreciate it!