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By Mark Ward Technology correspondent, BBC News
Computer motherboard, Eyewire BIOS in modern computers dates from the earliest
IBM PCs
PCs that start in seconds could result from an update to one of the oldest
parts of desktop computers.
The update will spell the end for the 25-year-old PC start-up software known as
Bios that initialises a machine so its operating system can get going.
The code was not intended to live nearly this long, and adapting it to modern
PCs is one reason they take as long as they do to warm up.
Experts say Bios' replacement, known as UEFI, will predominate in PCs by 2011.
The acronym stands for Unified Extensible Firmware Interface and is designed to
be more flexible than its venerable predecessor.
"Conventional Bios is up there with some of the physical pieces of the chip set
that have been kicking around the PC since 1979," said Mark Doran, head of the
UEFI Forum, which is overseeing development of the technology.
Mr Doran said the creators of the original Bios only expected it to have a
lifetime of about 250,000 machines - a figure that has long been surpassed.
"They are as amazed as anyone else that now it is still alive and well in a lot
of systems," he said. "It was never really designed to be extensible over
time."
AMI is a firm that develops Bios software. Brian Richardson, of AMI's technical
marketing team, said the age of the Bios was starting to hamper development as
64-bit computing became more common and machines mutated beyond basic desktops
and laptops.
Floppy disk, Eyewire PC BIOS constrains what external devices can act like.
"Drive size limits that were inherent to the original PC design - two terabytes
- are going to become an issue pretty soon for those that use their PC a lot
for pictures and video," he said.
Similarly, he said, as tablet computers and other smaller devices become more
popular having to get them working with a PC control system was going to cause
problems.
The problem emerges, he said, because Bios expects the machine it is getting
going to have the same basic internal set-up as the first PCs.
As a result, adding extra peripherals, such as keyboards that connect via USB
rather than the AT or PS/2 ports of yesteryear, has been technically far from
straightforward.
Similarly, Bios forces USB drives to be identified to a PC as either a hard
drive or a floppy drive. This, said Mr Richardson, could cause problems when
those thumb drives are used as a boot disc to get a system working while
installing or re-installing an operating system.
Said Mr Doran: "Compared to many other components, the rate of evolution of the
firmware pieces has been phenomenally slow."
UEFI frees any computer from being based around the blueprint and
specifications of the original PCs. It does not specify that a keyboard will
only connect via a PC's AT or PS/2 port.
"All it says is that somewhere in the machine there's a device that can produce
keyboard-type information," said Mr Doran.
Under UEFI, it will be much easier for that input to come a soft keyboard,
gestures on a touchscreen or any future input device.
Rack of computers, Think Stock UEFI is proving a boon to those managing lots of
computers in datacentres
"The extensible part of the name is important because we are going to have to
live with this for a long time," said Mr Doran.
He added that UEFI started life as an Intel-only specification known as EFI. It
morphed into a general standard when the need to replace Bios industry-wide
became more widely recognised.
The first to see the benefits of swapping old-fashioned Bios for UEFI have been
system administrators who have to oversee potentially thousands of PCs in data
centres or in offices around the world.
Before now, said Mr Doran, getting those machines working has been "pretty
painful" because of the limited capabilities of Bios.
By contrast, he said, UEFI has much better support for basic net protocols
which should mean that remote management is easier from the "bare metal"
upwards.
For consumers, said Mr Doran, the biggest obvious benefit of a machine running
UEFI will be the speed with which it starts up.
"At the moment it can be 25-30 seconds of boot time before you see the first
bit of OS sign-on," he said. "With UEFI we're getting it under a handful of
seconds."
"In terms of boot speed we're not at instant-on yet but it is already a lot
better than conventional Bios can manage," he said "and we're getting closer to
that every day."
Some PC and laptop makers are already using UEFI as are many firms that make
embedded computers. More, said Mr Richardson, will result as motherboard makers
complete the shift to using it.
He said that 2011 would be the year that sales of UEFI machines start to
dominate.
"I would say we are at the edge of the tipping point right now," he said.