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2 standard cmos setup, Date & time setup, Hard disk setup – Acrosser AR-B1690 User Manual

Page 26: Floppy setup, Boot sector virus protection

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AR-B1690 User’s Guide

26

5.2 STANDARD CMOS SETUP

The option allows you to record some basic system hardware configuration and set the
system clock and error handling. If the CPU board is already installed in a working system, you will not need to
select this option anymore.

Standard CMOS Setup

Date & Time Setup

Highlight the field and then press the [Page Up] /[Page Down] or [+]/[-] keys to set the current date.
Follow the month, day and year format.
Highlight the

Hard Disk Setup

The BIOS supports various types for user settings, The BIOS supports , ,
and so the user can install up to two hard disks. For the master and slave jumpers, please refer to
the hard disk’s installation descriptions and the hard disk jumper settings in section three of this manual.

You can select under the and fields. This will enable auto detection of your IDE
drives during boot-up. This will allow you to change your hard drives (with the power off) and then power on
without having to reconfigure your hard drive type. If you use older hard disk drives, which do not support this
feature, then you must configure the hard disk drive in the standard method as described above by the
option.

Floppy Setup

The option records the types of floppy disk drives installed in the system.
To enter the configuration value for a particular drive, highlight its corresponding field and then select the drive type
using the left-or right-arrow key.

Boot Sector Virus Protection

This option protects the boot sector and partition table of your hard disk against accidental modifications. Any
attempt to write to them will cause the system to halt and display a warning message. If this occurs, you can
either allow the operation to continue or use a bootable virus-free floppy disk to reboot and investigate your system.
The default setting is <Disabled>. This setting is recommended because it conflicts with new operating systems.
Installation of new operating systems requires that you disable this to prevent write errors.