Patent · US Expired

Personal computer with CMOS memory not having a separate battery

US5542077A · kind A · utility

19Cited by
10References
12Claims
0Family size

Assignee

Inventors

Key dates

Filing dateSep 10, 1993
Grant dateJul 30, 1996
Priority date
Expiry dateSep 10, 2013

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC G)Physics
  • CPC primaryG06F11/1417
  • WIPO fieldComputer technology
  • WIPO sectorElectrical engineering

Abstract

A computer system which utilizes a CMOS memory/RTC and does not have a separate battery for powering the CMOS memory/RTC. A serial EEPROM is utilized to maintain the contents of the CMOS memory. When the computer is entered into a setup mode and the CMOS information is to be saved, it is saved to both the CMOS memory and to the serial EEPROM. Upon booting up, a check is made to see if the CMOS memory has not lost data. If it has, then the copy stored in the serial EEPROM is retrieved and utilized. In a second embodiment, a flash EEPROM used to store the BIOS of the computer also stores this information. The flash EEPROM is a type where the EEPROM is divided into several partitions and each can be programmed independently of the others. The partition of the flash EEPROM used for the CMOS information is originally erased. The partition is sufficiently large to contain numerous copies of the CMOS data. Copies of the CMOS data are sequentially stored. If the partition should become filled up, then an erase cycle is performed and the CMOS data is written as the first copy. If upon booting the computer indicates that the CMOS memory is not trustworthy, then the partition is scanned until…

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.