It's awesome to notice how so many "girl friends" can be used as an excuse for any error we make (even though we didn't need that kind of information)... We love you so much dear ladies! For your question, I'll only answer to your girlfriend ;-PPlease help me! I Flashed my 6950 to a 6970 easily and it was running great for about a month. Until my girlfriends games updated my drivers (the ones for the 6950) and now i can even install any drivers for the card nor can i flash it back to 6950 or to a 6970 again. Please help me out ive been trying to figure this out for about 4 hours now.
Seriously, a game title cannot update your driver (only Microsoft DirectX, IF your DirectX is an old one - even though it shows that it's installing, it won't replace anything more recent). Now a simple thing you could do is use your BIOS switch on top of the card and put it on position "2" (assuming you've flashed your BIOS while in position "1"). Then shutdown (completely, even the PSU) for about a minute and reboot. All should come back to stock BIOS settings on your 6950. Note that if you've never switched your BIOS to position "1" before flashing, it means that you have replaced your default stock BIOS settings.
Regarding the later case, unfortunately (that was my case with a Gigabyte card), the CMOS called up by switch position "1" is empty, it does not contain a copy of the BIOS targeted by position "2" (before playing with RBE and my card's BIOS, trying to boot from position "1" gave me a blank screen and nothing else happened apart from rotating chassis fans). So if you have flashed your BIOS over switch "2" (meaning you forgot to switch to position "1" before flashing), I really don't know what you can do... Always remember that the first thing to do before anything else is to backup your stock BIOS from position "2" to position "1", just in case you forget to switch to position "1" on the day you'll want to flash your BIOS.
EDIT - maybe there's a solution: copy the stock BIOS file on the root of a flash drive or floppy drive or CD drive (whatever medium can be used in the boot-up sequence before the hard drive), and the system should automatically load that BIOS... Hopefully... I've read that somewhere but never tried it.
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