Asus Eee PC BIOS woes with Windows 7
This issue is not related to Microsoft Dynamics GP, but caused me a lot of frustration and wasted time. I decided to post about it on the blog to hopefully make life easier for anyone else "out there" who has the same problem and is searching for answers. This is a bit of a saga, so bear with me.
Introduction
I have an ASUS Eee PC 1005HA-H netbook (in piano black) and I love it. It is a beautiful looking machine with a 10" screen, long battery life and a reasonable amount of power for running Office applications and browsing the internet, etc. You can check out the overview and specifications on the ASUSTek site.
It came with Windows XP and the first thing I did was to install Windows 7 Ultimate onto it. Windows 7 had drivers for everything except one unknown device. Eventually, Windows 7's Problem Report utility suggested that I download a driver for the ACPI (Advanced Configuration and Power Interface). Once this driver was installed the Device Manager had drivers for all the components of the hardware.
However, I noticed that the multi-touch and scrolling functions of the touchpad as well as the keyboard function key controls for volume, etc. were not working. By installing the Windows XP versions of the drivers for the touchpad and audio card as well as the Super Hybrid Engine software I was able to get all the function key controls working.
Note: The Super Hybrid Engine software controls CPU and FSB clock speeds and optimises battery life.
At the time of this initial installation, I also saw that ASUS released a 0703 ROM BIOS upgrade and so I downloaded the ASUS Update windows based tool and the ROM image and upgraded the BIOS. Everything was fine with the machine working perfectly.
Windows 7 runs like a dream on the machine, even with Aero transparency turned on.
The Problem
OK, so "If it ain't broke, don't fix it"..... Nah, I am a nerd and want the latest and greatest. So when I recently saw that there was a couple of new ROM builds 0801 and 0905, I installed the ASUS Update tool again and installed 0905. I had previously updated the BIOS and all was well that time. Newer is always better, isn't it? What could go wrong?
Rebooting the machine, I checked the BIOS version. Everything looked great. Restarted Windows 7, logged in and the following error message appears:
Missing ASUS ACPI Driver, Please install ASUS ACPI Driver
Every time you click OK to dismiss the error, a new window with the same message appears. If you try to re-install the ACPI Driver, it will just roll back and fail. If you remove the driver entirely all the function keys and power control functionality stopped working. Then again, while the error was popping up, all that functionality is broken anyway.
After a bit of research on the font of all knowledge (Bing Search), it seems that the only way to fix the issue is to roll back to the 0703 BIOS. It appears that the 0801 and 0905 builds change something that breaks the ACPI Driver for Windows 7. Windows XP works fine with the new BIOS builds. We are going to need a new ACPI Driver for Windows 7 before we can use the new BIOS builds.
So now I knew what was required to fix the issue, but Murphy's Law was working against me.
The Solution
I already had a copy of the 0703 build of the ROM BIOS, so I tried to use the ASUS Update windows tool to roll back the BIOS. It told me that it would only work on ASUS machines and that it needed the ASUS ACPI Driver installed first. Great... it is because of the failure of that driver that I want to downgrade the BIOS.
Next idea, use the DOS level AFUDOS.EXE tool. I already have USB drives set up to boot into Windows 98 command prompt and Windows Vista PBE (Pre Boot Environment) command prompt. So I use the Windows 98 drive and copy the AFUDOS tool and the ROM image to the drive and reboot. It takes a few goes to get the machine to allow me to select the device to boot from, but I eventually get a Windows 98 command prompt. Relieved, I run the tool ... only to be told that the BIOS I want to install is older and cannot be installed.
After more research and a few downloads, I managed to get a special Engineering Edition of the AFUDOS tool which with a couple of extra command line parameters will allow an earlier build to be installed:
AFUDOS /ixxxx.rom /pbnc /n where xxxx=name.rom
Running this version of the ROM update tool (attached), I was finally able to restore the BIOS to version 0703 and everything is sweet again.
After the panic and stress was over, I tried looking again for information on what had happened and found this blog post:
I wish I had found this earlier as it would have saved me a heap of time.
Oh, well .... we live and learn.
David
23-Oct-2007: ASUSTek have released new Windows 7 drivers which now work with (in fact, require) the 0905 BIOS, see follow-up post: Asus Eee PC BIOS joys with Windows 7
Comments
Anonymous
October 21, 2009
I too have suffered through this cycle, but I love my little ASUS Eee PC 1005HA with 2G memory. It does most things I need for non development tasks. Even runs VS2010 fine for smaller projects. Not tried VM Workstation yet, some report it is workable, I suspect not for GP though.Anonymous
October 24, 2009
It works thanks so much!! I bought yesterday an eeePC 1101HA stupidly updated the BIOS at 2 hours of unpacking it and the display looses all the brightness. I blamed the BIOS update. thanks to you I started from the 1 BIOS file released for this "BRICK" and none of the BIOS worked or brought back the brightness of the display. I will go and change it back on the store tomorrow morning thanks!!!....Anonymous
November 03, 2009
I am looking at netbooks and noticed the ASUS myself ... rumor has it that netbooks are painfully slow. If you upgrade to 2GB ... can you run Office 2207 and normal programs? Are there tablet netbooks? Can you get SQL on it? Curious ....Anonymous
November 03, 2009
Denni, From a technology standpoint (but not having used one personally) there would have to be a performance/battery life tradeoff. You cannot have a 125W quad core and expect battery life to be "hours and hours" like we expect a netbook to be. That said, David has written a newer post on this subject that you would want to take a look at. http://blogs.msdn.com/developingfordynamicsgp/archive/2009/11/02/asus-eee-pc-and-microsoft-dynamics-gp.aspxAnonymous
August 15, 2015
The comment has been removedAnonymous
August 20, 2015
Hi Joey Thanks for the info. David