NOTE:ITS NOT FULL NEW,ALL FUNCTION WE 100% TESTED GOOD!
window.adminAccountId=230061539;
NOTE:ITS NOT FULL NEW,ALL FUNCTION WE 100% TESTED GOOD!
window.adminAccountId=230061539;
Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.
The latest Windows Operating Systems from Win8.1 up natively do support NVMe. For Win7 and Server 2008 R2 users I recommend to read the start post of >this< thread.
Nearly all mainboard manufacturers are meanwhile offering new BIOS versions with full NVMe support for their mainboards with an Intel 9-Series or X99 Chipset.
Many consumer SSDs with NVMe support are already available or will be available soon.
There is no doubt, that users with an up-to-date mainboard, whose original BIOS contains the required NVMe modules, will benefit from the performance boost initiated by a new NVMe supporting SSD.
But:
What about Intel or AMD Chipset Series mainboards with an AMI UEFI BIOS, but without native NVMe support given by the mainboard manufacturer?
Is it possible to give them the required NVMe support by modding the BIOS?
If yes, which modules have to be inserte