wojo wrote:
>
> I've never actually tried it, my flashes haven't ever been a problem, but
> I've heard of people having problems and getting a message saying the flash
> is older than the firmware already in place and it won't let them do it. I
> guess in the future I won't assume.
The main point is that you flash as a "last resort". However, that
advice is also
getting worn out as flash programs as you [reading between the lines]
noted _are_ way more reliable these days then they used to be.
In other words, in the years past I'd always choose a disk manager over
of chance of flashing to get a PC to see a larger hard drive then the
bios allows, but these days you have to look at each case individually.
If the client has a good quality board then
its most likely the board maker has quality flashes. So yeah, its less
risk then it used to be.