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  2. Because it boots so fast, traditional tricks for accessing the BIOS (e.g. spam F2 on boot) are impossible. The internet tells you that if you want to access your BIOS, you have to use your OS to tell your machine to boot to the BIOS on its next shutdown. One day, your OS breaks badly.

  3. Boot off with installation DVD in your computer. Select boot from disk. Select the Repair your computer. Click Next. Choose System Restore. Click Next. Select the Windows/Vista drive. Click Finish. Note: If you are missing your Windows Vista/7 installation DVD then create one using these instructions.

  4. I see 3 ways. Task Scheduler has support to run it both in startup and in login. If the path I commented on OP exists you can drop an executable there. Registry. Don't do this if you don't know what you're doing, but they're in HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE>SOFTWARE>Microsoft>Windows>CurrentVersion>Run. For a beginner I'd recommend doing task scheduler ...

  5. GRUB boots that just fine, and I see the GRUB boot menu on start-up where I can select whatever items GRUB knows about. Then I installed Windows 10 Pro from a recently downloaded ISO. It installed Windows Boot Manager onto the same UEFI partition, and left the Ubuntu intact (great!) and that boots fine into Windows 10.

  6. System boots directly into windows without BIOS option

    superuser.com/questions/1766826/system-boots-directly-into-windows-without...

    When my system boots, it goes directly to the windows login page. As per the motherboard manual, I kept pressing DEL when PC starts but it doesn't work. Moreover, I don't see the motherboard manufacturer logo which usually comes when system starts. Would appreciate any help/info on this. Thanks.

  7. linux boots but windows doesn't - Super User

    superuser.com/questions/729821

    Intermittent problems can be caused by faulty ram, maybe a full round of memtest testing could help rule out a hardware (cpu/ram) issue. And of course try checking the hard drive (s) for errors. I do know that different computers can be picky when it comes to bootable USB devices, maybe the BIOS can't or doesn't want to use your windows USB ...

  8. You'll see the Windows Directory under System Summary. Open start menu, type "disk management" or press Win + R > diskmgmt.msc > Enter. That'll list all the drives in your PC. The system drive will be listed with the Boot flag, most likely along with "Crash Dump" and "Page File". Simply press Win + R and run cmd.

  9. 24. "UEFI with CSM" usually means mixed mode in which both native (UEFI) and CSM-based (BIOS) boot is available. The boot menu will show a mix of native UEFI boot entries and CSM "bootable disk" entries in this case. However, one important side effect of disabling CSM is that it'll allow certain UEFI-only features to be activated (such as "fast ...

  10. 1. X: drive is for the recovery environment of windows. The C: drive contains the main OS and your personal files. The X: drive contains files to boot to the recovery environment and the recovery tools. they are kept separate so even if the main os (which in this case is Windows 10) is corrupted and cannot boot, the X: partition will allow it ...

  11. I want to execute a command when Ubuntu boots. The commands in particular are: sudo shutdown +m sudo shutdown +1 I want the computer to shut down as soon as it starts for testing purposes. I plan on switching the computer back on with a bit of circuitry I am testing. How can I execute this command automatically at system start up?