My HP Pavilion laptop's BIOS is locked out by the manufacturer, preventing me from installing Linux. In the past,when I attempted to install Linux on my other laptop I had to turn off Intel RST and turn on AHCI mode
However, I am unable to perform the same action on my brand-new HP laptop since I do not have access to the Advanced BIOS function.
My question is:
Does Linux support intel RST now?
Is there anyway I can unlock laptop's BIOS settings? I tried with HP customer support but they said it is not possible.
Related
I have a PC with Windows 10 Pro without an embedded Bluetooth hardware. I have bought CSR8510 A10 dongle for that cause and currently the PC doesn't identify him (it used be before I formatted this PC). I tried to update it's driver and I have received
"
Windows found drivers for your device but encountered an error while attempting to install them. Generic Bluetooth Radio. The system cannot find the file specified.
"
I believe it is related to a problem with my Windows Update because there are 8 missing important security and quality fixes (according to Windows Update) and the computer cant install them due to error 0x800703e3.
When I tried to download the drivers and install them it didn't help and even when I installed CSR driver from the official website I have received a runtime error (of C++), "Program: C:\Windows\system32\regsvr32.exe R6034"
What should I do next?
I have a C&T RCO-3000 computer, Intel I5 processor x64 with Windows 10 Enterprise. The computer has 4 embedded input and 4 output.
I tried to manage those GPIO with GpioController.GetDefault() but it returns null.
I checked on device manager and there is nothing about GPIO. Is it correct ?
Watching at System the reported operative system is Windows 10 Enterprise, I should have expected a reference to IoT, maybe the wrong os was installed and GPIO device is not recognized.
I searched a lot about missing drivers or something to enable but found nothing useful.
Update 1
The chip which drives the GPIO is a Fintek F81866A. I found a related question about that chip, but I need something for Windows.
Keep getting this error and have tried pretty much everything I have found on this website and no luck.SS
It means that the hardware acceleration is either disabled or not available for your cpu.
Most intel chips and amd chips have this feature. All AMD Ryzen cpus have this feature. Check the website for your cpu if it is available.
Now if it is disabled then you can go to bios to enable it.
If you are on amd cpu then it won't work with windows os. Windows os can support only intel cpus for hardware acceleration using haxm or recently on Ryzen cpus with windows 10 latest april update and hyper-v enabled.
If you are using amd cpus before the ryzen series, you can switch to any linux distro which will be fine, at it has kvm for hardware acceleration.
I would like to run an AVDM.
I'm running Lubuntu as a guest on a MAC OS X host.
What i'm doing wrong?
KVM is required to run this AVD.
HAXM requires a Genuine Intel processor.
Unfortunately, your computer does not support hardware accelerated virtualization.
Here are some of your options:
1) Use a physical device for testing
2) Develop on a Windows/OSX computer with an Intel processor that supports VT-x and NX
3) Develop on a Linux computer that supports VT-x or SVM
4) Use an Android Virtual Device based on an ARM system image
(This is 10x slower than hardware accelerated virtualization)
Currently I have Ubuntu Linux running on my MacBook Pro. I want to try out OS X again, but keeping Linux for now. Can I install OS X to a USB drive without touching my internal storage?
Your external drive needs a GUID partition with at least 8 GB of available space to install OS X. For best results, the volume should be formatted as Mac OS X Extended format (not FAT, NTFS, or EXFAT).
Attach a USB, FireWire, or Thunderbolt storage device to your computer, or insert an SDHC or SDXC card into the SD card slot if your Mac has one:
Set up a gpt partition table
Restart up your Mac. Immediately after you hear the startup sound, press and hold the Command+R on your keyboard.
After you see an Apple logo or globe appear, you can release the keys. If you're prompted to select a Wi-Fi network, select a network that has a working Internet connection.
When the Recovery screen appears, make sure you're connected to the Internet. If not, select a Wi-Fi network with a working Internet connection from the Wi-Fi menu.
Select the option to Install OS X from the Recovery window.
Follow the onscreen instructions to complete the installation. When you're asked to select a drive for installation, click the button "Show All Drives". Be sure you select the external storage device you've connected for this purpose, not your computer's built-in startup drive.
References:
apple support