As he said in the previous message, there are almost never changelogs for microcode updates. I do, however, have to disagree with *never* disabling microcode updates. If I recall properly, the AMD Phenom II 720 was able to be unlocked to 4 cores via a misconfiguration that enabled it with ACC. AMD later corrected this issue with a microcode update. True, some motherboards worked around that fix a different way, but if you had a first gen board with ACC support you *had* to have the old microcode for it to work. The update killed your free core :) On Jan 17, 2011 3:06 PM, wrote: > Volker Armin Hemmann [11-01-17 20:16]: >> On Monday 17 January 2011 18:21:48 meino.cramer@gmx.de wrote: >> > Hi, >> > >> > I have two questions: >> > >> > 1) Do I have to enable microcode updates in the BIOS of my Crosshair >> > IV Formula to activate microcodes push in the CPU by the module >> > "microcode" ? (AMD Phenom X6 1090T) >> > >> >> you ALWAYS have to activate that! This way the bios updates the microcode with >> the latest version it is carrying around. Not activating that option is >> really, really stupid. For many reasons. It is also (almost) completely >> unrelated to that blob. >> >> That blob is for the OS so you can upload an even more recent version of >> microcode. In case your bios sucks. For example. >> >> > 2) Does anyone know, what these microcodes do? They are fixes for... >> > ...what? >> >> the CPU. All CPUs use microcode. For decades. Google, or go straight to >> wikipedia. >> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microcode >> > > Cool down. I know for waht microcodes are good for. > > My question means: What specific bugs/features of my CPU get fixed, > when I use the microcde included in the recent microcode update??? > > > >