Zoran, I'm working on this subject now, but I need to do regular work too :-).
Seriously I'm in the process of changing my current stationary work-horse to two T400 laptops on docking stations. I've just received docks (very dirty, noisy fans) and I borrowed my Raspberry programmer to a friend. I hope to finish working on hardware this weekend and I will be ready to play with bioses when I get Raspberry back. I think that the first method would be to "copy" flash from one board to another and we will see. I also try to change MAC in original bios, maybe this is possible. I will report everything back, hope it will help someone. Michael Widlok PS. Sorry for double mail I messed addresses. On Fri, Feb 3, 2017 at 9:58 PM, Zoran Stojsavljevic <zoran.stojsavlje...@gmail.com> wrote: > Ron, I do agree, does not seem to be promising. It will add problems down > the road, as requirements grow. > > Zoran > > On Fri, Feb 3, 2017 at 8:45 PM, ron minnich <rminn...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> >> >> On Fri, Feb 3, 2017 at 9:45 AM Zoran Stojsavljevic >> <zoran.stojsavlje...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>> >>> >>> Ron, any (practical) example of above described practices? I have in my >>> laptops here 6 x 4 GB DIMM modules and 2 x 8GB DIMM modules, all of them >>> have SPD mounted. >> >> >> >> DIMMs are so great but so old school :-) >> >> on some systems, in flash, there are 4 and 8 element tables which are >> indexed by GPIOs .You use the 2 or 3 bits from 2-3 GPIOs to index the table >> and that's how you get your RAM programming. No SPD. You can see how much >> room this leaves for problems. >> >> This is just one simple example. >> >> ron >> > > -- coreboot mailing list: coreboot@coreboot.org https://www.coreboot.org/mailman/listinfo/coreboot