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Old 05-27-2023, 12:03 PM   #1
woody649
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Default Does anyone here speak Linux?

I have created a disaster. No excuses -- I did it. I've dug myself into a hole and I can't find a way out.

A friend who works in IT for a large hospital used to be an independent computer systems vendor. He cleaned out his basement recently, and gave me an old (2007) Asus laptop rather than toss it in the trash.It had Windows XP on it, and my hope was to switch it to Linux and make it usable for some poor family that can't afford a newer, fancier computer. (Although this was a fairly high-end laptop when new).

It's a 32-bit cpu, so that limits the current distros of Linux that can be used. I made installation DVDs for a few and tried them all. Next problem: this particular computer uses a Pentium M cpu, and the Pentium M doesn't support "PAE" (whatever that is), and most Linux flavors apparently need PAE.

But there are a couple of Debian distros that will (supposedly) work without PAE, so I tried a couple. Got one installed, but it ran so slowly that it was unusable. Installed another, but it won't boot -- as the boot sequence scrolls down the screen virtually every entry reports an error.

Then I found something called Tiny10, which is a stripped-down version of Windows 10. It's available in 32-bit and it should run on an i386 CPU with 1 GB of RAM. So I downloaded that and burned a DVD.

But ... the Linux installation somehow overrides the BIOS and won't boot from the DVD. Even with the DVD in the drive, it tries to boot into Linux ... which won't run.

Does anyone have any idea how I can fix this so I can boot into the Tiny10 installation DVD?
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Old 05-28-2023, 01:36 AM   #2
Barrie Greed
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Quote:
Originally Posted by woody649 View Post
I have created a disaster. No excuses -- I did it. I've dug myself into a hole and I can't find a way out.

A friend who works in IT for a large hospital used to be an independent computer systems vendor. He cleaned out his basement recently, and gave me an old (2007) Asus laptop rather than toss it in the trash.It had Windows XP on it, and my hope was to switch it to Linux and make it usable for some poor family that can't afford a newer, fancier computer. (Although this was a fairly high-end laptop when new).

It's a 32-bit cpu, so that limits the current distros of Linux that can be used. I made installation DVDs for a few and tried them all. Next problem: this particular computer uses a Pentium M cpu, and the Pentium M doesn't support "PAE" (whatever that is), and most Linux flavors apparently need PAE.

But there are a couple of Debian distros that will (supposedly) work without PAE, so I tried a couple. Got one installed, but it ran so slowly that it was unusable. Installed another, but it won't boot -- as the boot sequence scrolls down the screen virtually every entry reports an error.

Then I found something called Tiny10, which is a stripped-down version of Windows 10. It's available in 32-bit and it should run on an i386 CPU with 1 GB of RAM. So I downloaded that and burned a DVD.

But ... the Linux installation somehow overrides the BIOS and won't boot from the DVD. Even with the DVD in the drive, it tries to boot into Linux ... which won't run.

Does anyone have any idea how I can fix this so I can boot into the Tiny10 installation DVD?

Woody


This sounds like a BIOS issue rather than a Linux problem. If you hold down F2 whilst booting it should get you into the BIOS where you can change the boot order for drives.


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Old 05-28-2023, 11:15 AM   #3
woody649
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Woody


This sounds like a BIOS issue rather than a Linux problem. If you hold down F2 whilst booting it should get you into the BIOS where you can change the boot order for drives.


Barrie Greed
Been there, done that. The BIOS boot sequence is set correctly, and I have confirmed and reconfirmed the setting multiple times.
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Old 05-29-2023, 02:08 AM   #4
Barrie Greed
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Been there, done that. The BIOS boot sequence is set correctly, and I have confirmed and reconfirmed the setting multiple times.

Woody


OK. Try holding down shift as you boot. This should get you into GRUB. Select UEFI Options and from there select BIOS options which should give you a list of boot options you can reorder. Hopefully you should be able to select the Optical Drive.


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