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Chapter 3: BIOS Setup
3.1 - About the BIOS
The BIOS is the basic input/output system, the firmware on the motherboard
that enables your hardware to interface with your software. The BIOS
determines what a computer can do without accessing programs from a disk.
The BIOS contains all the code required to control the keyboard, display
screen, disk drives, serial communications, and a number of miscellaneous
functions. This chapter describes the various BIOS settings that can be
used to configure your system.
The BIOS section of this manual is subject to change without notice and is
provided for reference purposes only. The settings and configurations of the
BIOS are current at the time of print and are subject to change, and
therefore may not match exactly what is displayed on screen.
This section describes the BIOS setup program. The setup program lets you
modify basic configuration settings. The settings are then stored in a
dedicated, battery-backed memory (called NVRAM) that retains the
information even when the power is turned off.
To start the BIOS setup utility:
1. Turn on or reboot your system.
2. Press <Del> during POST (<Tab> on remote console) to start the BIOS
setup utility.
3.1.1 Manual Bars
The menu bar at the top of the windows lists these selections:
Main
For changing the basic system configuration
Advanced
For changing the advanced system settings
PCI PnP
For changing the advanced PCI/PnP settings
Boot
For changing the system boot configuration
Security
For setting the Supervisor and User passwords
Chipset
For customize the AMD chipset function
Exit
For selecting the exit options and loading default
settings