QUOTE(LepPpeR @ Mar 17 2005, 11:35 AM)
my question to MS is why they do not FILL the wholes with something that cannot me moved. Never understood why they just left it open like that.
Perhaps filling it with a glue like substance.
The Netpliance I-Opener was one of my first, and still my most enjoyable hack projects. There are many similarities between hacking the I-Opener and hacking the Xbox!
I-Opener was essentially a fully-functioning PC, sold at a loss. Its BIOS locked the system down to run only its own operating system. Sound like a certain game console we know?
It was a subscription-based internet appliance, much like WebTV, which would let people with little to no computer experience get online and check their email, etc. Pentium processor, integrated XVGA LCD screen, speakers, USB, modem, etc. Looked a bit like the flat-panel iMacs. For $99!!
Hackers were able to develop an alternate BIOS that would allow you to use the system as a regular PC. (Sound like a certain game console we know?) Many ran Linux or Windows on it.
Reflashing the BIOS was a matter of taking the BIOS chip out of its socket and reflashing it with a programmer or a PC motherboard.
Well, Netpliance didn't like this, and their newer versions of the I-Opener had the BIOS chip and socket covered in epoxy, much like your suggestion. We still found ways around it. A heat gun would soften the epoxy enough that it could be carefully chipped out. Later on, there were ways to reflash the chip without even needing to remove it from the socket. ("Exploits" anyone?

)
Even if MS were to epoxy over the LPC connectors, there are alternate points on the board to get those signals.
