BIOS Features
MSI bundled the Z77A-G65 Gaming motherboard with the latest version of their UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) BIOS, a customized version of the AMI-developed UEFI style BIOS. The UEFI BIOS offers full keyboard and mouse support while using the BIOS pages with enhanced mouse navigation supported by right clicking the mouse – goes back to previous view if inside a settings pop-up or on a sub-menu page.
MSI's UEFI BIOS design remains a personal favorite because of its smoothness, layout, and design. The BIOS is very responsive both with the mouse and keyboard. I didn't notice any lag at all when using the mouse buttons – menus and settings responded well to double-click and reverse navigation occurred quickly when right-clicking the window or screen. MSI also includes a screencap utility, which generates a BMP 1024×768 image on an attached USB drive upon clicking the F12 function key.
Settings page
Settings page, System Status page
Settings page, Advanced page
Settings page, Advanced page, PCI Subsystem Settings page
Settings page, Advanced page, ACPI Settings page
Settings page, Advanced page, Integrated Peripherals page
Settings page, Advanced page, Integrated Peripherals page continued
Settings page, Advanced page, Integrated Graphics Configuration page
Settings page, Advanced page, Intel(R) Rapid Start Technology page
Settings page, Advanced page, USB Configuration page
Settings page, Advanced page, Hardware Monitor page
Settings page, Advanced page, Intel(R) Smart Connect Configuration page
Settings page, Advanced page, Power Management Setup page
Settings page, Advanced page, Windows 8 Configuration page
Settings page, Advanced page, Windows 8 Configuration page, Secure Boot page
Settings page, Advanced page, Windows 8 Configuration page, Secure Boot page, Image Execution page
Settings page, Advanced page, Windows 8 Configuration page, Secure Boot page, Key Management page
Settings page, Advanced page, Windows 8 Configuration page, Secure Boot page, Key Management page continued
Settings page, Boot page
Settings page, Save & Exit page
Overclocking Settings (OC) page
Overclocking Settings page continued
Overclocking Settings page continued
Overclocking Settings page, My OC Genie Option page
Overclocking Settings page, Advanced DRAM Configuration page
Overclocking Settings page, Advanced DRAM Configuration page continued
Overclocking Settings page, Overclocking Profiles page
Overclocking Settings page, Overclocking Profiles page, Details page
Overclocking Settings page, CPU Specifications page
Overclocking Settings page, CPU Specifications page, CPU Technology Support page
Overclocking Settings page, MEMORY-Z page
Overclocking Settings page, MEMORY-Z page, DIMM Details page
Overclocking Settings page, MEMORY-Z page, DIMM Details page, X.M.P. Support Information page
Overclocking Settings page, CPU Features page
Energy Savings (ECO) page
Utilities page
Utilities page, M-Flash page
Nice job indeed.
Should be
Nice job indeed.
Should be “red” rather than “read” when describing color scheme early on in the review.
Thanks for the kind words and
Thanks for the kind words and pointing out the wording issue. It has been corrected…
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How can you release something
How can you release something under NDA?
A product that’s been for
A product that's been for sale for weeks?
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813130686&nm_mc=KNC-GoogleAdwords&cm_mmc=KNC-GoogleAdwords-_-pla-_-Intel+Motherboards-_-N82E16813130686&gclid=COqcy-6spbcCFexcMgoddFoAwQ
This is NDA!!!
This is NDA!!!
This is a Z77 board, not a
This is a Z77 board, not a Z87 board.
Very nice review of the MSI
Very nice review of the MSI Z77A-GD65 gaming motherboard. I am thinking of buying one of these when I do my next build and i really appreciate the thorough article. Keep up the great work Morry!
Thank you. Glad to help.
Thank you. Glad to help. Make sure to check out reviews on other sites – others may have run into things that we didn't see in our review sample…
I am curious… This is a
I am curious… This is a gaming motherboard. So, I have to assume one would install a gaming video card. Is there a specific reason for the DVI and VGA ports on the back? Does the gamer actually use those ports?
I suppose one can connect other monitors up to those ports in a pinch, but does anybody use VGA any more?
Personally, I would rather see extra USB ports than a VGA port.
Thanks for the review,
I just
Thanks for the review,
I just bought the GD65 standard board from Newegg yesterday (it was a bit cheaper than the gaming board and gave me 8 gigs or ram free). Aside from the better network chip and cooler paint job, is there any other difference?
Also MSI: support the PC Perspective Podcast! I exclusively bought from MSI as a thank you for their support(…and also I could not get Alex’s voice out of my head).
We didn’t review the plain
We didn't review the plain GD65, but from what I can tell from the GD65 specs, the differences are the paint job and coloration, heatsinks, Killer NIC, and inclusion of Sound Blaster software pack.
This overview of a Dell
This overview of a Dell server PowerEdge R720 makes an interesting comparison: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wxkjrQ4UbJk
This is a really nice board,
This is a really nice board, and a nice price! I have been behind on gaming machines for a while and wonder what video cards go well with it in SLI?
A dozen Los Angeles-area
A dozen Los Angeles-area residents—including the state’s second-largest biller for chiropractic services—were taken into custody Tuesday in connection with seven criminal cases alleging they cumulatively submitted more than $22 million in false billings to Medicare.
Those arrested also include a physician’s assistant and owners of durable medical equipment and ambulance companies, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
In one of the cases, three defendants affiliated with Gardena-based ProMed Medical Transportation, an ambulance company, were charged with submitting more than $5.9 million in false claims to Medicare between 2008 and 2011.
ProMed’s owner, Yaroslav Proshak, 45, of Valley Village, general manager Sharetta Wallace, 35, of Inglewood, and office manager and biller Sergey Mumjian, 40, of West Hollywood submitted claims for medically unnecessary transportation services and then created fake documentation purporting to support those claims, the government alleges.
The charges filed in Los Angeles federal court are part of a nationwide crackdown by Medicare Fraud Strike Force operations in eight cities that led to charges against 89 people for their alleged participation in schemes to collectively submit about $223 million in phony claims to Medicare, federal prosecutors said.
The 12 Southland arrestees are among 13 defendants charged in Los Angeles in cases that allege health care fraud. The dozen either were arrested or surrendered to authorities after learning that they had been charged. The 13th defendant is a fugitive.
The defendants include Dr. Houshang Pavehzadeh, of the Sylmar Physician Medical Group, who allegedly billed Medicare more than $1.7 million for chiropractic treatments he never performed.
During the scheme, which ran from 2005 through 2012, Pavehzadeh, 40, of Agoura Hills, became the second-largest Medicare biller in California for chiropractic services—even though he was not in the United States when some of the services were performed, prosecutors allege.
In addition to being charged with health care fraud, Pavehzadeh is charged with aggravated identity theft related to Medicare beneficiaries whose information he used to bill Medicare as a part of the alleged scheme.
When investigators tried to conduct an audit of Pavehzadeh’s claims, he falsely reported to the Los Angeles Police Department that he had been carjacked and that patient files requested by the auditors had been stolen from his car, according to federal prosecutors.
Nine defendants affiliated with durable medical equipment companies were also charged in five separate indictments.
Olufunke Fadojutimi, 41, of Carson, a registered nurse; Ayodeji Temitayo Fatunmbi, 41, formerly of Carson, and now believed to be living in Nigeria; and Maritza Velazquez, 40, of Las Vegas, were charged with health care fraud.
The scheme allegedly revolved around Lutemi Medical Supplies, a company Fadojutimi owned and where Fatunmbi and Velazquez worked. According to the indictment in the case, Lutemi billed Medicare more than $8.3 million in claims, primarily for medically unnecessary power wheelchairs.
Fadojutimi and Fatunmbi allegedly laundered Medicare funds in order to purchase fraudulent prescriptions for the power wheelchairs and pay illegal kickbacks to recruit Medicare beneficiaries.
Fadojutimi and Velazquez was arrested today and Fatunmbi is currently a fugitive, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
Susanna Artsruni, 45, of North Hollywood, and Erasmus Kotey, 76, of Montebello, a licensed physician’s assistant, allegedly worked together to commit health care fraud out of a medical clinic on Vermont Avenue where they both worked.
Kotey allegedly prescribed medically unnecessary equipment, including power wheelchairs, for Medicare beneficiaries. Many of those power wheelchair prescriptions were then used by Artsruni’s company, Mid-Valley Medical Supply, to support fraudulent claims to Medicare, prosecutors allege.
In only four months, the clinic and Mid-Valley billed Medicare more than $525,000 for the bogus claims, prosecutors allege.
Artsruni was previously convicted of health care fraud and was on pretrial supervision at the time she allegedly laundered some of the proceeds of the latest fraud.
Three other medical equipment cases were also brought, alleging fraudulent Medicare billing for medically unnecessary power wheelchairs that were sometimes never even delivered.
In one case, Akinola Afolabi, 53, of Long Beach, owner of Emmanuel Medical Supply, allegedly submitted more than $2.6 million in in false and fraudulent billing to Medicare.
In another case, Queen Anieze-Smith, 52, of Encino, and Abdul King- Garba, 47, of Westwood, owner-operators of ITC Medical Supply, allegedly submitted more than $1.8 million in false and fraudulent billing to Medicare, according to court documents.
In the third case, Clement Etim Aghedo, 53, of Fontana, owner of Ace Medical Supply Co., allegedly submitted more than $1.8 in false and fraudulent claims to Medicare.
The charge of health care fraud carries a potential maximum penalty of 10 years in federal prison; money laundering carries a potential 20 years in prison; and aggravated identity theft carries a mandatory two-year prison term.
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