@JWNoctis I'm behind the times with my newest board and CPU being a decade old now so lacking in knowledge. However with this old board UEFI has a feature if it doesn't POST 2 or 3 times in a row then defaults are loaded and asked wether to enter BIOS settings or continue so this could be incorparated.
IIRC Intel XTU had also had been around at that time and if their profile module existed in the UEFI it could save BIOS settings from Windows OS. Actually there was a lot you could do to BIOS settings from Windows around that time but that's another story.
See
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/gaming/resources/overclocking-xtu-guide.html
Seems they also introduced AI for XTU in January.
I think current boards are also supposed to do that, though in my limited experience, they sometimes don't, especially when overclocking or undervolting destabilized the processor and/or the memory.
First time I've heard of that feature on Intel boards. Thanks.
Got one reply from Insyde which I can't gather much from it's not worded the best and if I were a manufacturer I would not be convinced
View attachment 350432
When you run an East Asian AI-generated answer through Google Translate.
Considering how said AI could probably translate better than Google, I'm sure they are just flexing the secret corporate art of saying very little, with very many words.
At least it now sounds as if it could be something accessed from within the BIOS, so it's not all in vain. Theoretically, if they were not intending to do it with remote services and with quantized and finetuned version of some recently popular small but usefully powerful model, then it would conceivably require at least a 64Gb flash chip to store the thing, and 8GB of memory.
And then we shall see people jailbreaking it to say and do funny things, if it worked at all.