{"version":"1.0","provider_name":"Ami Sapphire's Notices","provider_url":"http:\/\/cwcyrix.nsupdate.info\/gnu-social\/public\/","type":"link","title":"Clarissa Walker (amisapphire@cwcyrix.nsupdate.info)'s status on Saturday, 25-Apr-2026 18:48:20 EDT","author_name":"Clarissa Walker (amisapphire@cwcyrix.nsupdate.info)","author_url":"http:\/\/cwcyrix.nsupdate.info\/gnu-social\/public\/index.php\/amisapphire","url":"http:\/\/cwcyrix.nsupdate.info\/gnu-social\/public\/notice\/232","html":"And... it also seems that I finally managed to get the board to keep its BIOS settings.<br \/>\n<br \/>\nThat literally took over an hour to solve that.<br \/>\n<br \/>\nIt originally started with it not responding with the power button, then eventually I walked off to retrieve something (over two minutes), then tried again and realized it powered on...<br \/>\n<br \/>\nSet the time and date, exit, power off the board then the PSU... wait ~2 minutes, power on the PSU, then the board. Forgot its settings.<br \/>\n<br \/>\nRepeat this ad-nauseam between testing RAM for errors and CPU temp. Oh, and the display would glitch up at times. May have to retire that particular old Sony SDM-HS94P monitor.<br \/>\n<br \/>\nEarlier, I disabled the BMC by jumper; the BMC was still zombie-enabled, but now the BIOS would no longer acknowledge it. Odd.<br \/>\n<br \/>\nEventually jumpered the Chassis Intrusion setting and then used the Set User Default settings in BIOS. From there, BMC was no longer running...<br \/>\n<br \/>\nThe board is in standby; it needs a SATA drive before the system migration."}