Обновление bios на системной плате gigabyte проводим за пару минут
Software and Firmware
Gigabyte’s taskbar-resident utility menu, App Center, also includes shortcuts to various Windows settings, a download page for third-party applications, and a download utility for Gigabyte (and sponsored) apps. Some of these apps include 3D OSD system monitor overlay, @BIOS firmware updater with Face Wizard splash-screen modifier, Ambient LED lighting control with flashing themes in the user’s single-color choice, AutoGreen power setting, USB Blocker, Cloud Station networking utility, EasyTune overclocking, Game Boost application prioritization, System Information Viewer, and a Smart suite of backup, access scheduling for additional users, a heads-up display for viewing tutorial overlay during games, and keyboard programing.
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The Z390 Gaming SLI arrived with two-color lighting (red for the audio trace, pale blue for the heat sink covers), but the included Ambient LED application only has the ability to set one color for all onboard LEDs. That’s why we were happy to see that Gigabyte’s downloader offered its more-flexible RGB Fusion utility. But even though the utility installed successfully, it doesn’t support the board.
Gigabyte’s EasyTune is where the fun often starts, and the firm even gives the uninitiated a head start with an inbuilt overclocking profile. That 5.20 GHz fixed-frequency profile unfortunately included a 1.45V CPU core, which in turn pushed our CPU to its thermal throttling threshold the instant we started Prime95. Meanwhile, it’s AutoTuning algorithm crashed so hard the program appeared to have amnesia concerning where it left off.
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The good parts of EasyTune are all found in its manual overclocking menus, where we successfully changed our CPU’s base clock, multiplier, a core voltage. These levels can be monitored by clicking the wavy line icon near the lower-right corner of the program interface to reveal a monitoring menu on the right-hand side of your screen (we split the screenshot of Hardware Monitor to fit the image on this page).
Though linked to EasyTune, Hardware Monitor is part of Gigabyte’s System Information Viewer utility, and clicking its “back” icon launches the app.
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Users hoping to access SIV for such things as fan control will need to wait for it to run its fan calibration utility at first use. The program also offers alert settings and logging for things like fan speed and voltage levels.