F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop How can I refresh my computer's basic settings?

How can I refresh my computer's basic settings?

How can I refresh my computer's basic settings?

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Absalonse
Junior Member
47
04-04-2026, 06:55 AM
#11
What if you try a 2.5 inch SSD instead? Does it work without NVMe support?
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Absalonse
04-04-2026, 06:55 AM #11

What if you try a 2.5 inch SSD instead? Does it work without NVMe support?

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lustriker
Member
71
04-11-2026, 12:04 AM
#12
Yeah, 2.5 inch SSD drives are super cheap. You can pick up a 256 gigabyte or a 500 gigabyte SATA SSD and use it right away. For everyday stuff with just the computer, there won't be much of a difference. Sure, M.2 is technically faster, but in real life, using that old PC like a brand new one should feel great.
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lustriker
04-11-2026, 12:04 AM #12

Yeah, 2.5 inch SSD drives are super cheap. You can pick up a 256 gigabyte or a 500 gigabyte SATA SSD and use it right away. For everyday stuff with just the computer, there won't be much of a difference. Sure, M.2 is technically faster, but in real life, using that old PC like a brand new one should feel great.

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ITz_NoY
Member
240
04-14-2026, 05:19 AM
#13
My PC doesn't have an M.2 stick, though there IS space for one here too. This board looks just like my setup!
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ITz_NoY
04-14-2026, 05:19 AM #13

My PC doesn't have an M.2 stick, though there IS space for one here too. This board looks just like my setup!

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JGbb
Member
163
04-16-2026, 02:23 AM
#14
If you remember that right now, the Z97 chips were the very first ones with NVMe for starting up computers.
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JGbb
04-16-2026, 02:23 AM #14

If you remember that right now, the Z97 chips were the very first ones with NVMe for starting up computers.

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Hypersnake
Member
208
04-22-2026, 10:06 PM
#15
Some people do this, but others don't. You just have to refresh your computer's main chip (BIOS) before it will work properly with that software update.
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Hypersnake
04-22-2026, 10:06 PM #15

Some people do this, but others don't. You just have to refresh your computer's main chip (BIOS) before it will work properly with that software update.

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Snowy0
Member
70
04-22-2026, 10:16 PM
#16
That's really interesting. I had a ASUS motherboard, an Intel i5 processor, and a Biostar NVMe stick. It ran pretty fast, hitting around 800 MB/s at full speed, though that's just one side of the story. Everything else worked well too.
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Snowy0
04-22-2026, 10:16 PM #16

That's really interesting. I had a ASUS motherboard, an Intel i5 processor, and a Biostar NVMe stick. It ran pretty fast, hitting around 800 MB/s at full speed, though that's just one side of the story. Everything else worked well too.

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dodgeman96
Junior Member
38
04-25-2026, 08:52 AM
#17
I really cannot use this drive for games because Windows 11 doesn't see my m.2 drive at all. It won't even show up when I boot up or check the BIOS. Can you tell me where to go so I can find a solution? When I turn on my computer, there is a flashing red light right next to the SSD that says M.2 PCIE. But I just cannot find it in the disk manager or anywhere else. Please help me out here!
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dodgeman96
04-25-2026, 08:52 AM #17

I really cannot use this drive for games because Windows 11 doesn't see my m.2 drive at all. It won't even show up when I boot up or check the BIOS. Can you tell me where to go so I can find a solution? When I turn on my computer, there is a flashing red light right next to the SSD that says M.2 PCIE. But I just cannot find it in the disk manager or anywhere else. Please help me out here!

M
masterpet09
Member
111
05-15-2026, 11:02 AM
#18
It might be really hard to get your oddly labeled motherboard working with a new NVMe drive, or even the right software setting to make it work.
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masterpet09
05-15-2026, 11:02 AM #18

It might be really hard to get your oddly labeled motherboard working with a new NVMe drive, or even the right software setting to make it work.

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Wolfyyy_
Senior Member
358
05-17-2026, 06:34 AM
#19
In that situation, the PCIe bus could be unplugged or disconnected from the M.2 slot. This means the computer might only recognize older SATA M.2 drives instead of faster NVMe drives. Even without reading the official manual, we can't be 100% sure what this is exactly. If it's a real PCIe connection, Windows will likely find your NVMe drive right away and install drivers automatically. That way, you could boot from it once the drivers finish loading, not before the computer starts up. However, if this slot accepts only SATA M.2 drives, you might actually be able to turn on your PC using that drive instead of another one.
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Wolfyyy_
05-17-2026, 06:34 AM #19

In that situation, the PCIe bus could be unplugged or disconnected from the M.2 slot. This means the computer might only recognize older SATA M.2 drives instead of faster NVMe drives. Even without reading the official manual, we can't be 100% sure what this is exactly. If it's a real PCIe connection, Windows will likely find your NVMe drive right away and install drivers automatically. That way, you could boot from it once the drivers finish loading, not before the computer starts up. However, if this slot accepts only SATA M.2 drives, you might actually be able to turn on your PC using that drive instead of another one.

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Twitchy_UHD
Junior Member
1
05-18-2026, 12:26 PM
#20
Gigabyte GA-Z97X Gaming 1 doesn't have an M.2 slot. The gaming 7 has one bootable slot. I own both of those before. Currently running Linux on a gaming 7 with a 4970k and a GTX 1080 ti (too powerful) using 32 gigabytes of DDR3 RAM.
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Twitchy_UHD
05-18-2026, 12:26 PM #20

Gigabyte GA-Z97X Gaming 1 doesn't have an M.2 slot. The gaming 7 has one bootable slot. I own both of those before. Currently running Linux on a gaming 7 with a 4970k and a GTX 1080 ti (too powerful) using 32 gigabytes of DDR3 RAM.

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