Afudos Engineering Edition Meaning

Mar 30, 2018 - ASUS AFUDOS 2.29 Engineering Edition [0/1] - Post Description (1/1) Showing 1-1 of 1 messages. Need AFUDOS engineering edition to flash.

We've got an asus P6X58D Premium mainboard with an intel i7 930 2800 cpu. The bios is only seeing 4G of memory ever since I upgraded it (there's 12G installed). Hwinfo and astra32 both are able to see all 12G. I've tried many different bios flash programs trying to downgrade it back to the original but none of the programs are able to do it. The more recent afudos programs (v4 onwards) are able to downgrade but they give an error 'problem getting flash information' when I try it. Asus uses the older afudos programs (v2) which don't have downgrade ability.

I was thinking of trying using flashrom (a linux program) as a last resort. Anyone know a way to do it in dos? We've got an asus P6X58D Premium mainboard with an intel i7 930 2800 cpu. The bios is only seeing 4G of memory ever since I upgraded it (there's 12G installed). Hwinfo and astra32 both are able to see all 12G. I've tried many different bios flash programs trying to downgrade it back to the original but none of the programs are able to do it. The more recent afudos programs (v4 onwards) are able to downgrade but they give an error 'problem getting flash information' when I try it.

IPKG-Packages (Qnap Linux) From MakeItFit - Wiki. Jump to: navigation, search. Install GCC via ipkg ipkg install gcc. I'm trying to find out how I can install the GCC compiler of version 4.4 or higher. I did not find an IPKG module for this. I did find an OpenPkg module, but I was unable to bootstrap the OpenPkg installation on the 419. Ipkg install gcc qnap. Install QPKGed IPKG according to the guide 'Automatic installation via QPKG' above (but do not enable it yet, or disable it if it was enabled after the install) copy the IPKG start script to the old IPKG directory.

Asus uses the older afudos programs (v2) which don't have downgrade ability. I was thinking of trying using flashrom (a linux program) as a last resort. Anyone know a way to do it in dos? OK -- flashed it back to the original. Unfortunately, it's still not seeing the memory. However, it did fix one problem -- after I upgraded, the computer would reboot 3 times on a cold start before actually booting. Someone at the asus forums thought it might be recycling to try to set the memory.

Anyway, now it boots properly. I had tried looking at the cpu socket pins to see if any were bent. They're so small it's hard to tell. I did see some spots that didn't look uniform with the rest, but I couldn't tell if they were supposed to look that way or not. OK -- flashed it back to the original. Unfortunately, it's still not seeing the memory. However, it did fix one problem -- after I upgraded, the computer would reboot 3 times on a cold start before actually booting.

Someone at the asus forums thought it might be recycling to try to set the memory. Anyway, now it boots properly. I had tried looking at the cpu socket pins to see if any were bent. They're so small it's hard to tell. I did see some spots that didn't look uniform with the rest, but I couldn't tell if they were supposed to look that way or not.

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Minetest has a small albeit caring community comprising of players, modders, and engine developers and contributors. Anyone is welcome to contribute to Minetest, either by creating new content (mods and games), or by improving the core-engine. Check out the source code on its if you're interested.

And while you're at it, also join their and their. Check out - a free, open-source alternative to Minecraft. It's still in its pre-release stages, lots of bugs here and there, but it certainly gives Minecraft a run for its money thanks to its core architecture - Minetest is actually a game-engine, and the games are technically glorified mod-packs.

Minetest is all about mods, and provides an awesome Lua API, which makes it so easy to create content. Minetest has a small albeit caring community comprising of players, modders, and engine developers and contributors. Anyone is welcome to contribute to Minetest, either by creating new content (mods and games), or by improving the core-engine. Check out the source code on its if you're interested. And while you're at it, also join their and their. Check out - a free, open-source alternative to Minecraft. It's still in its pre-release stages, lots of bugs here and there, but it certainly gives Minecraft a run for its money thanks to its core architecture - Minetest is actually a game-engine, and the games are technically glorified mod-packs. Minetest is all about mods, and provides an awesome Lua API, which makes it so easy to create content.