Re: Would like to replace BIOS on Lenovo X131e running Fedora - should this work?

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On Fri, Feb 28, 2025 at 7:52 AM Andre Robatino
<robatino@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> I have a Lenovo X131e which is currently running an old BIOS from johnlewis.ie (4.0-6588-g4acd8ea-dirty, 09/04/2014). It was originally a Chromebook and I replaced the BIOS so there would be no danger of it automatically reinstalling Chrome. I see there is a Lenovo page at https://support.lenovo.com/us/en/downloads/ds029771-bios-update-utility-bootable-cd-for-windows-10-64-bit-81-32-bit-64-bit-8-32-bit-64-bit-7-32-bit-64-bit-xp-thinkpad-x131e with what appear to be BIOS updates from 2019 for the x131e, any machine type, but labeled as for Windows. Are other people using this already with Fedora? If I installed it using the Bootable CD image, any reason why the current Fedora-only install wouldn't continue to work? Just want to make sure since it's currently working okay and I just don't like the idea of having an old nonstandard BIOS installed.

Related to Windows-only support... I encounter this on occasion, like
on Acer laptops. I work around this by purchasing a SSD with a USB
interface (i.e., thumb drive).[0] The thumb drive is SSD-fast, and
usually provides USB 3.0. Then I use Rufus to install Windows on the
thumb drive. That gives me a Windows2Go machine so I can install
firmware updates.[1] Windows2Go is a version (configuration?) of
Windows that runs on a thumb drive instead of a hard drive.

Finally, I boot to Windows on the thumb drive and install the BIOS or
UEFI updates. Once the updates are complete, I put the thumb drive
back in the desk drawer until I need to perform another firmware
update.

Some computers, like some from Dell and HP, support Linux or provide
an agnostic procedure that does not depend on Windows. I especially
like Dell's procedure. Dell gives you the BIOS/UEFI update as a
self-extracting zip file *.exe). But the firmware updater can parse
the zip file, so you never need to decompress it. The updater will do
it for you. All you need to do is place the EXE file at /boot/efi,
then boot into the BIOS, select BIOS Upgrade, and select the EXE from
the filesystem.

[0] https://rufus.ie/en/
[1] https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/previous-versions/windows/it-pro/windows-10/deployment/windows-to-go/windows-to-go-overview

Jeff
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