You'll find your frustration repeated throughout this board. The general rule on the BIOS update is to download the binary & run it yourself. There are several people on here who have completely bricked their motherboards trying to update the BIOS through SupportAssist. They literally had to have Dell replace their motherboards.
I have indeed downloaded it manually and installed it.
I will now find it hard to trust anything on this Support Assist and will most likely go to the site and download all drivers etc manually from now on.
After many bugs with the Dell installed software, I simply went vanilla windows, manually installed the bios, and let Windows do updates. They are spot on gathering the Dell drivers. If there are any missing, I can always go to Dell support and cherry pick what I need. I hate bloatware.
@MeePond @Anything is risky while it's in progress. If it were me, I'd probably pull the power cord, wait 30 seconds & power it back up (that's what I did). At the point it's at, if it's going to fail it will do so no matter what you do. If it comes back up, update the BIOS through the update package. If it doesn't, call Dell for RMA/return.
I have indeed downloaded it manually and installed it.
I will now find it hard to trust anything on this Support Assist and will most likely go to the site and download all drivers etc manually from now on.
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Yes, install your BIOS updates manually (but only if there is a reason to do so in the first place).
Only other thing you really need from Dell is AW-CC. Maybe a low-level firmware update for some OEM hardware device that Dell managed to post online for us (like maybe a SSD firmware update for example) but that would be a rare occurrence.
Microsoft's Windows-Update should toss you anything else you really need.
Get your (enhanced/full-featured) video drivers from nvidia.com or amd.com .
So am I having the same reported issue here? Should I wait, pull the plug, or is it too late to save this one? Did not know Alienware Updater was not to be trusted! This is an R11, stuck at 3% for an hour.
Interesting, it was right after a BIOS update (with the BIOS screen telling me not to turn off). After it got stuck I turned it off, restarted it, and it went back to to the same screen but now at 2% progress and also appearing to be stuck. I did notice when booting that it briefly gave me the option to skip this process. Should I? What's it trying to do? Thanks!
I wonder if installing Crucial's Acronis disk imaging software has something to do with this. I used it to copy my M2 boot drive to another internal SSD for purposes of a swap but tried to complete this update before physically swapping the drives but after completing the copy.
Thank you for your responses. I disconnected the extra SSDs and it booted correctly. When Acronis cloned a new boot drive (internally) and I rebooted after the BIOS update it must have confused the system to have two boot drives.
MeatRocket
1 Rookie
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55 Posts
4
November 24th, 2020 06:00
phudmak
2 Posts
0
November 24th, 2020 06:00
Cheers for the reply bud.
I have indeed downloaded it manually and installed it.
I will now find it hard to trust anything on this Support Assist and will most likely go to the site and download all drivers etc manually from now on.
Thank you.
donl456
7 Posts
0
November 27th, 2020 18:00
i'm stuck over 4 hours, will it eventually kick out and stop trying to update so i can restart my computuer and try to install manually?
Romain LU
2 Posts
0
December 13th, 2020 13:00
It seems I am stuck too ...
Rythmicone
1 Rookie
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33 Posts
0
December 13th, 2020 16:00
After many bugs with the Dell installed software, I simply went vanilla windows, manually installed the bios, and let Windows do updates. They are spot on gathering the Dell drivers. If there are any missing, I can always go to Dell support and cherry pick what I need. I hate bloatware.
MeePond
1 Message
0
December 26th, 2020 11:00
@MeatRocket Please help!
Can you tell me what to do if this update is stuck at about 75% for hours?
My son got his Alienware aurora for Christmas and we (unfortunately) tried to install the updates through support assist (which we will NOT do again!)
MeatRocket
1 Rookie
•
55 Posts
1
December 26th, 2020 14:00
@MeePond @Anything is risky while it's in progress. If it were me, I'd probably pull the power cord, wait 30 seconds & power it back up (that's what I did). At the point it's at, if it's going to fail it will do so no matter what you do. If it comes back up, update the BIOS through the update package. If it doesn't, call Dell for RMA/return.
Tesla1856
8 Wizard
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17.4K Posts
0
December 27th, 2020 11:00
I have indeed downloaded it manually and installed it.
I will now find it hard to trust anything on this Support Assist and will most likely go to the site and download all drivers etc manually from now on.
=======================
Yes, install your BIOS updates manually (but only if there is a reason to do so in the first place).
Only other thing you really need from Dell is AW-CC. Maybe a low-level firmware update for some OEM hardware device that Dell managed to post online for us (like maybe a SSD firmware update for example) but that would be a rare occurrence.
Microsoft's Windows-Update should toss you anything else you really need.
Get your (enhanced/full-featured) video drivers from nvidia.com or amd.com .
Vaayu Reddy
1 Message
0
February 4th, 2021 09:00
what binory do you mean because I am having the same problem so like is it a driver or what?
Davve
1 Message
0
February 15th, 2021 03:00
Same problem... I wanted to update the BIOS and after 75% the update stuck for hours. No solution until now
FlaviusBelisarius
1 Rookie
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5 Posts
0
January 29th, 2023 07:00
So am I having the same reported issue here? Should I wait, pull the plug, or is it too late to save this one? Did not know Alienware Updater was not to be trusted! This is an R11, stuck at 3% for an hour.
FlaviusBelisarius
1 Rookie
•
5 Posts
0
January 29th, 2023 09:00
Interesting, it was right after a BIOS update (with the BIOS screen telling me not to turn off). After it got stuck I turned it off, restarted it, and it went back to to the same screen but now at 2% progress and also appearing to be stuck. I did notice when booting that it briefly gave me the option to skip this process. Should I? What's it trying to do? Thanks!
I wonder if installing Crucial's Acronis disk imaging software has something to do with this. I used it to copy my M2 boot drive to another internal SSD for purposes of a swap but tried to complete this update before physically swapping the drives but after completing the copy.
Vanadiel
6 Professor
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7.1K Posts
0
January 29th, 2023 09:00
That looks like a drive repair, not a BIOS issue.
FlaviusBelisarius
1 Rookie
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5 Posts
0
January 29th, 2023 10:00
Thank you for your responses. I disconnected the extra SSDs and it booted correctly. When Acronis cloned a new boot drive (internally) and I rebooted after the BIOS update it must have confused the system to have two boot drives.
Vanadiel
6 Professor
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7.1K Posts
0
January 29th, 2023 10:00
You can skip it, but if the file system is corrupt it will not boot.
If you used Acronis incorrectly, you can get a situation like this. Hopefully you have a good working backup, in case you need to restore your data.