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		<title><![CDATA[Dead Internet Society - Tech Woes]]></title>
		<link>https://deadinternet.chat/</link>
		<description><![CDATA[Dead Internet Society - https://deadinternet.chat]]></description>
		<pubDate>Mon, 15 Jun 2026 12:14:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<generator>MyBB</generator>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[Dell Optiplex 7010 Display Port Issue [solved] and other troublehshooting]]></title>
			<link>https://deadinternet.chat/showthread.php?tid=3</link>
			<pubDate>Fri, 15 May 2026 20:20:44 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://deadinternet.chat/member.php?action=profile&uid=2">blim</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://deadinternet.chat/showthread.php?tid=3</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[Just thought I would write about this Dell Optiplex I acquired for free because it wasn't working. It wouldn't post on Display Port. I also had to do some other troubleshooting but I was delighted when I realized it has an i7 3370 3.4 Ghz CPU. <br />
<br />
<span style="font-weight: bold;" class="mycode_b">The long story short here is if you have a Dell Optiplex or similar that you think is good but it wont post on Display Port, you're going to need a VGA cable and a monitor with VGA input </span>to change the BIOS settings. For some reason, pulling the CMOS battery and/or booting it with the reset jumper removed, didn't seem to clear whatever was not allowing it to post and boot on Display Port. <a href="https://www.dell.com/support/kbdoc/en-ca/000124377/how-to-perform-a-bios-or-cmos-reset-and-clear-the-nvram-on-dell-systems" target="_blank" rel="noopener" class="mycode_url">Here's a link if you want to try that. </a><br />
<br />
I got a VGA cable from work, connected it to an old LCD TV I still have with a VGA port and boom, it posted and I could get into the BIOS configuration page. I'm not sure exactly what did it but I reset to defaults, then in the video section I switched it from "auto" (you would think this would work) to "Intel HD 4000". The CMOS battery removal or jumper should have reset to default so I think for some reason it seems telling it to specfically use the onboard graphics chip, it forced it to ouput the video signal to the right place, the Display Port. <br />
<br />
It also might be worth mentioning at first it didn't post on one of the display ports, I moved it to the second port, rebooted and then I saw the spash screen. <br />
<br />
<hr class="mycode_hr" />
<br />
When I first tried to boot it up, I was using Display Port on my main monitor and it wouldn't post. The fans spun and everything seemed normal so I figured RAM, worst case a bad CPU.<br />
<br />
Being a Dell build and compact case, you have to remove a lot of stuff to work on it. I'm not really a fan of all the plastic latching mechanisms Dell uses for securing their hardware, I find some of it more of a pain then simple screws in any ATX build. <br />
<br />
Anways I decided to disconnect and remove anything that isn't needed to function. I disconnected the SATA cables from the board and yanked out the drive tray with the SSD and DVD-RW, unplugged the front panel. <br />
<br />
I had it setup in a differnet spot so it was on VGA but it still wasn't posting, atleast if I remeber right. So I removed all the ram and then put one 4GB module back in and then it posted. I figured it had a bad memory module and I'd just try them one by one to eliminate the bad one. <br />
<br />
It still didn't want to boot, even with the hard drive reconnected, "no bootable media", but the hard drive seemed to be okay. Okay not really a big deal, MBR issue or BIOS setting, wrose case reinstall windows, but I didn't touch it for a couple months because it wasn't a priority. <br />
<br />
A couple months later and I had sold my gaming PC, because I wasn't using it anymore and it needed some maintenance that I didn't want to deal with, another 'Blim story' not worth telling, so I decided to get this thing going. That's when I realized it wasn't posting on Display Port, so I had to connect it to a monitor with VGA, change the settings to get it booting up on DP. <br />
<br />
I put all the RAM modules back in one by one and they're all working 16GB or DDR3 so now I'm questioning what was going on in the first place, maybe it was just a video signal issue all long? Later I will run Memtest86 to be sure. <br />
<br />
---<br />
<br />
The previous owner had recently installed a 480 GB SSD as well. So now, for free with a bit of hassle, I have a decent little i7 3770 3.4 Ghz system wit 16 GB of DDR3 and a 480 GB drive. I'll try to find a cheap GPU for it from a similar era, somehting like a GTX 1070. Maybe I'll sell it, either way it will be a decent little work CPU for now and I'll need it because I have a bunch of manul data backup to do, GBs worth of it.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[Just thought I would write about this Dell Optiplex I acquired for free because it wasn't working. It wouldn't post on Display Port. I also had to do some other troubleshooting but I was delighted when I realized it has an i7 3370 3.4 Ghz CPU. <br />
<br />
<span style="font-weight: bold;" class="mycode_b">The long story short here is if you have a Dell Optiplex or similar that you think is good but it wont post on Display Port, you're going to need a VGA cable and a monitor with VGA input </span>to change the BIOS settings. For some reason, pulling the CMOS battery and/or booting it with the reset jumper removed, didn't seem to clear whatever was not allowing it to post and boot on Display Port. <a href="https://www.dell.com/support/kbdoc/en-ca/000124377/how-to-perform-a-bios-or-cmos-reset-and-clear-the-nvram-on-dell-systems" target="_blank" rel="noopener" class="mycode_url">Here's a link if you want to try that. </a><br />
<br />
I got a VGA cable from work, connected it to an old LCD TV I still have with a VGA port and boom, it posted and I could get into the BIOS configuration page. I'm not sure exactly what did it but I reset to defaults, then in the video section I switched it from "auto" (you would think this would work) to "Intel HD 4000". The CMOS battery removal or jumper should have reset to default so I think for some reason it seems telling it to specfically use the onboard graphics chip, it forced it to ouput the video signal to the right place, the Display Port. <br />
<br />
It also might be worth mentioning at first it didn't post on one of the display ports, I moved it to the second port, rebooted and then I saw the spash screen. <br />
<br />
<hr class="mycode_hr" />
<br />
When I first tried to boot it up, I was using Display Port on my main monitor and it wouldn't post. The fans spun and everything seemed normal so I figured RAM, worst case a bad CPU.<br />
<br />
Being a Dell build and compact case, you have to remove a lot of stuff to work on it. I'm not really a fan of all the plastic latching mechanisms Dell uses for securing their hardware, I find some of it more of a pain then simple screws in any ATX build. <br />
<br />
Anways I decided to disconnect and remove anything that isn't needed to function. I disconnected the SATA cables from the board and yanked out the drive tray with the SSD and DVD-RW, unplugged the front panel. <br />
<br />
I had it setup in a differnet spot so it was on VGA but it still wasn't posting, atleast if I remeber right. So I removed all the ram and then put one 4GB module back in and then it posted. I figured it had a bad memory module and I'd just try them one by one to eliminate the bad one. <br />
<br />
It still didn't want to boot, even with the hard drive reconnected, "no bootable media", but the hard drive seemed to be okay. Okay not really a big deal, MBR issue or BIOS setting, wrose case reinstall windows, but I didn't touch it for a couple months because it wasn't a priority. <br />
<br />
A couple months later and I had sold my gaming PC, because I wasn't using it anymore and it needed some maintenance that I didn't want to deal with, another 'Blim story' not worth telling, so I decided to get this thing going. That's when I realized it wasn't posting on Display Port, so I had to connect it to a monitor with VGA, change the settings to get it booting up on DP. <br />
<br />
I put all the RAM modules back in one by one and they're all working 16GB or DDR3 so now I'm questioning what was going on in the first place, maybe it was just a video signal issue all long? Later I will run Memtest86 to be sure. <br />
<br />
---<br />
<br />
The previous owner had recently installed a 480 GB SSD as well. So now, for free with a bit of hassle, I have a decent little i7 3770 3.4 Ghz system wit 16 GB of DDR3 and a 480 GB drive. I'll try to find a cheap GPU for it from a similar era, somehting like a GTX 1070. Maybe I'll sell it, either way it will be a decent little work CPU for now and I'll need it because I have a bunch of manul data backup to do, GBs worth of it.]]></content:encoded>
		</item>
		<item>
			<title><![CDATA[The slight irritation of figuring out how to access the BIOS or Boot Menu]]></title>
			<link>https://deadinternet.chat/showthread.php?tid=2</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 14 May 2026 15:31:49 +0000</pubDate>
			<dc:creator><![CDATA[<a href="https://deadinternet.chat/member.php?action=profile&uid=2">blim</a>]]></dc:creator>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://deadinternet.chat/showthread.php?tid=2</guid>
			<description><![CDATA[This is something many of us have done 1000 times, except still, with some maufacturers, it's not straight forward. <br />
<br />
I was working on a laptop, truing to get into the BIOS or boot menu to reinstall Linux Mint. I must have rebooted it a dozen fucking times before I got into the BIOS. Anyone else get irriated about this shit sometimes?<br />
<br />
Usually it's pretty easy, sometimes when you reboot, the spash screen at post is quick but it will still tell you, hit F12 for BIOS, or Delete. Othertimes, and in this case it was a quick flash "ASUS" and it doesn't tell you what to hit and if your not fast enough, it moves to startup. <br />
<br />
So I reboot and I'm hitting F12 and then Delete, nope, and can't CTRL ALT Delete now so there is the desktop. Okay reboot, try it again, nope, too slow I guess, or I'm hitting the wrong one first. Desktop again...welll at least the boot time is fast on this machine (way faster than my last desktop, that's another story..).<br />
<br />
At one point I was trying F2 as well, just to see if I can get to the Boot Menu but that didn't seem to work either.<br />
<br />
Alright I better Google to see exactly what key I need to press. It could be Del, F12, F2, Google even says sometimes it's Esc. It would be nice if everyone could just agree on one fucking key. <br />
<br />
---<br />
<br />
Anyways it's not even a big issue, it's just another thing you have to Google that you really shouldn't have to, just tell me what key it is at the spash screen and I would have it first try. Maybe I can be a bit dumb, unprepared or rushed but I've installed Windows and Linux probably 1000 times by now. I really shouldn't have to be rebooting and hitting random keys a dozen times before I can get a boot menu or BIOS.<br />
<br />
/end rant]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[This is something many of us have done 1000 times, except still, with some maufacturers, it's not straight forward. <br />
<br />
I was working on a laptop, truing to get into the BIOS or boot menu to reinstall Linux Mint. I must have rebooted it a dozen fucking times before I got into the BIOS. Anyone else get irriated about this shit sometimes?<br />
<br />
Usually it's pretty easy, sometimes when you reboot, the spash screen at post is quick but it will still tell you, hit F12 for BIOS, or Delete. Othertimes, and in this case it was a quick flash "ASUS" and it doesn't tell you what to hit and if your not fast enough, it moves to startup. <br />
<br />
So I reboot and I'm hitting F12 and then Delete, nope, and can't CTRL ALT Delete now so there is the desktop. Okay reboot, try it again, nope, too slow I guess, or I'm hitting the wrong one first. Desktop again...welll at least the boot time is fast on this machine (way faster than my last desktop, that's another story..).<br />
<br />
At one point I was trying F2 as well, just to see if I can get to the Boot Menu but that didn't seem to work either.<br />
<br />
Alright I better Google to see exactly what key I need to press. It could be Del, F12, F2, Google even says sometimes it's Esc. It would be nice if everyone could just agree on one fucking key. <br />
<br />
---<br />
<br />
Anyways it's not even a big issue, it's just another thing you have to Google that you really shouldn't have to, just tell me what key it is at the spash screen and I would have it first try. Maybe I can be a bit dumb, unprepared or rushed but I've installed Windows and Linux probably 1000 times by now. I really shouldn't have to be rebooting and hitting random keys a dozen times before I can get a boot menu or BIOS.<br />
<br />
/end rant]]></content:encoded>
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