Fred, what was this other machine that booted this Windows XP? Unless
they are virtually identical, that wouldn't work too well. If you
installed Windows XP on that other machine and now trying to boot it off
of this machine... well that is your problem.
--
Bill
Gateway MX6124 ('06 era) 1 of 3 - Windows XP SP2
To be more precise, Microsoft does not want you and me to go around
switching hard drives from one computer to another, so they've built in
some safeguards to keep this from happening very much. The bottom line
is that if the motherboard chipsets are absolutely identical between two
systems, a hard drive that boots up on one is 99% probable to boot up on
the other. For Intel chipset motherboards, at least, there is a little
bit of tolerance for chipsets that are almost identical. Anything else,
and a drive that boots up on one computer will give a BSOD on the other
most of the time. The rest of the time, the system will simply hang, as
has apparently happened with the Profile 4.
In short, Microsoft has inserted some chipset specific instructions
early on into the system bootstrap process, unlike most versions of
Linux that do not care what motherboard and other chips are in the
system. Linux adjusts itself to the system chips while booting up.
The only other thing I can suggest is to boot up the Profile 4 into the
system CMOS setup, make sure that the hard drive and its true capacity
are recognized, and make sure that none of the other BIOS settings are
out of whack... Ben Myers
Ben Myers, I have tried to access the CMOS settings with F1, but no
luck. Of course I have also tried F8 to get to Safe mode, no luck. I
just get no display, can't see what is going on...NO POST BEEP EVER.
Zero beeps. I THINK it used to give one beep.
Could it be the CMOS battery? It has never been replaced. It is a
2032, does it need to be rechargeable type or just regular?
Thank you very much.
Fred
With CMOS batteries being fairly inexpensive, replacing the one in the
Profile 4 might be worth a try. Replacing it also wipes out the CMOS
settings, which could be corrupted and the cause of the problem.
If you see nothing at all on the screen when you power it up, then F1
for setup and F8 for safe mode won't do any good... Ben Myers
Have you swapped the RAM with the other one? 2 beeps on an AMI BIOS is a
parity error, which would be a memory problem (I don't know who made your
BIOS).
Have you taken everything out that's not needed to boot, like a NIC, a
modem, etc.? Also disconnect any external drives and printers and see what
happens.
--
SC Tom
In this nominal state, perform "tab,tab, and enter"-->Windows WELCOME
SOUND PLAYS, PROPER WALLPAPER APPEARS!!!-->
No Windows shortcuts visible.
No Windows taskbar visible.
Right-click desktop, get Menu, select properties-->no response.
Right-click desktop, get Menu, able to create shortcuts on desktop,
right click on shortcuts, 'save as', and see folders.
No programs run (such as Word, Paint, Desktop Properties) EXCEPT
NOTEPAD!!! I was
able to create, edit and save a text file with notepad.
I then can shut down the machine as I used to by doing "windows logo
key", 'u', and 'u'
Through these experiments I have drawn some conclusions.
I need to see what others say first.
Thanks for you help with my (expensive) old Betsy.
Fred
Do you have another video card you could put in? I had a similar problem
with an old Digital workstation- it wouldn't display anything until the
login screen came up. It seemed that all the lower displays wouldn't work,
like 640x480, so I could get into BIOS and adjust my settings. That's not
all that's going on with yours, I don't think, but it could be a start.
If you hit the key you need to hit to get into BIOS and let it sit for a
while, does the BIOS screen or anything ever come up? If you unplug the
keyboard and boot it, do you get a keyboard error message, or a different
number of beeps?
--
SC Tom