Hi, On Fri, Aug 04, 2006 at 12:43:45AM +0200, Stefan Reinauer wrote: > Basically if you can't ID a chip, you can't write to it either.
I'll try some more computers I have access to. If I find one which _does_ get the ID correctly I know it's a problem with the board and not with the chips themselves. > Some board vendors, Asus is known to be one of them, secure their boards > from "flash viruses" (did they mean linuxbios?) with additional GPIO linux > This kind of stuff requires reverse engineering (which was legal in > Germany last time I had to do this) or a loooot of patience talking to > sales reps. Can some of the programs in util/ be used to find out whether or not such GPIOs could be in place? Cheers, Uwe. -- Uwe Hermann http://www.hermann-uwe.de http://www.it-services-uh.de | http://www.crazy-hacks.org http://www.holsham-traders.de | http://www.unmaintained-free-software.org
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