Browsing for some hardware to assemble a new system, nn AMD MSI motherboard caught my attention.
Checking the motherboard compatibility list got me really miffed, as updating BIOS is apparently impossible if not on Window$ and all supported CPUs with integrated graphics require later updates.
MSI was the first brand where I ran Linux, on a Megabook. It installed smoothly, ran flawlessly and even improved battery life and hardware output above what the competition achieved.
Looks like those times are past.
worst case you can install w10 once now and years from now you can just run a Windows live usb if needed
I don’t like MSI as a manufacturer, but compatibility is not a real concern if not muleheaded about it.
I don’t think I’ve ever updated a BIOS from any operating system, always flashed via the BIOS itself. Most can flash the BIOS without even a CPU installed these days.
It’s a good idea to validate the information before being outraged at it.
I don’t have experience with MSI recently, but I’d be really surprised if you couldn’t flash a new BIOS off the system partition or FAT32 USB. You may not be able to update from Linux directly, but almost all motherboards I’ve seen support doing it from the BIOS interface.
Yep, got an MSI motherboard, that’s how I’m doing it
Check the user manual. See if it supports loading a BIOS image from a flash drive.
MSI is one of the most compatible you’ll find. They make server components as well.
I’m running msi on a couple systems with no issues.
Which motherboard do you have? There is almost always a way to load from a flash drive via the BIOS. Many motherboards even have a way to do it from a flashdrive without the UI working at all via a button on the back (BIOS Flashback).
I think that you may be able to update from BIOS (maybe with only power, no CPU no ram) and maybe check fwupd