TSGL: Old computer
Russell W. Coover
coover at fastmail.fm
Sat Jul 12 23:23:19 EDT 2008
Don,
If there is more than one memory chip, try removing one of them. That
doesn't work the first time, put the first back and take another out ... and
so on until each has been removed with all of the others remaining in the
machine.
Russ
-----Original Message-----
From: list-bounces at tsgserver.com [mailto:list-bounces at tsgserver.com] On
Behalf Of Don Penlington
Sent: Saturday, July 12, 2008 8:09 PM
To: Tech Support Guy Mailing List
Subject: Re: TSGL: Old computer
Russ wrote:
>Have you tried to boot to a boot cd>>
Yes. But nothing happens. I can't get into bios to change the boot order.
I'll try a dos boot floppy (Engineman's suggestion) , but I doubt it will
work for the same reason.
Dean wrote:<<Do you get any keyboard response at all?>>
No. I've tried 2 known good keyboards. I'll try again, as that thought had
occurred to me. Even so, if all was well, it wouldn't just be sitting
there waiting. So entering the bios won't achieve anything than perhaps
changing the boot order to allow a boot CD to run.
Dean wrote:<<If the cmos battery has gone bad>>
I hadn't thought of that. I'll ask her if the clock has been slowing. Worth
trying. Quite likely it hasn't been replaced in 6 years.
Might a boot virus or corrupted MBR halt the boot process at this stage?
Don Penlington
From the Beach at Surfers Paradise in sunny Queensland.
Computer tutorials, local scenery, and other things at my website:
http://users.tpg.com.au/deepend/index1.html
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