24 Oct
2014
24 Oct
'14
12:39 p.m.
Technically no chips were bricked. That is correct. But for the average consumer the point is meaningless. The driver rendered their device unusable. Hams are a bit different as far as handling technical issues, but think about your hypothetical Aunt Millie. She'd plug in whatever device she'd been using after the upgrade and it wouldn't work. As far as Aunt Millie is concern it is bricked.
Cheers, Jim
Jim McCorison Orcas Island, WA
On Oct 24, 2014, at 12:34 PM, Jim Unroe rock.unroe@gmail.com wrote:
No chips were "bricked". "Bricked" implies that the chip will no longer function, period. They can be restored and there are videos appearing that show how to do it.
Jim KC9HI