Ben Myers <> wrote in
news:hah4j4$i2u$:
> Boris wrote:
>> "BillW50" <> wrote in news:hag0og$j1q$-
>> september.org:
>>
>>> In news:Xns9C9C6A04BF72nospamnospaminvalid@188.40.43. 213,
>>> Boris typed on Tue, 6 Oct 2009 17:25:18 +0000 (UTC):
>>>> I just tried that. Seems that it ignores the ESC key (probably
>>>> supposed to), and just boots normally to Windows.
>>> Well before you give up, the rest of the function keys that you
>>> haven't tried yet. Also worth trying is holding down one of the
>>> following: DEL, Insert, Tab, Shift, or CTRL right after the screen
>>> lites up are also sometimes used to get to other menus like the BIOS
>>> boot menu.
>>>
>>
>> I tried them all:
>>
>> F1, BIOS Setup Utility
>> F2, boots to Windows normally
>> F3, boots to Windows normally
>> F4, boots to Windows normally
>> F5, give Windows Advanced Menu Setup (Safe Boot, etc.)
>> F6, boots to Windows normally
>> F7, boots to Windows normally
>> F8, boots to Windows normally
>> F9, boots to Windows normally
>> F10, BIOS Setup Utility
>> F11, boots to Windows normally
>> F12, boots to Windows normally
>> Del, BIOS Setup Utility
>> ESC, boots to Windows normally
>> Del, boots to Windows normally
>> ALT, boots to Windows normally
>> Shift, boots to Windows normally
>> Pause/Break, nothing ever comes up, not even cursor against all black
>> screen, held for a minute, when released, still nothing
>
> This is the way the BIOS setup works on Intel D850-series motherboards
> (and many other Intel D845 and D865 boards). I worked on a Gateway
> board like yours some time ago, and I am nearly 100% certain that
> Gateway did not screw around with the Intel BIOS code. I know of no
> instance when a Gateway BIOS setup behaved differently from a generic
> Intel one. Gateway never had the software engineering expertise to
> modify BIOS code.
>
> Okay. So press F1 to enter the BIOS Setup Utility, then use the right
> arrow key to highlight the Boot menu. When the word Boot is
> highlighted, press Enter.
>
> The Boot submenu will allow you to choose the order in which the BIOS
> tries to boot from devices. The default is to try to boot from
> floppy, then CD-ROM, then hard drive, then network adapter.
>
> You can find the technical manual for your motherboard on the Intel
> web site in the category of archived (e.g. older) motherboards. It is
> worth reading, even if it tells you more than you need to know.
>
> In summary, your board is capable of booting from a CD-ROM. You just
> have not figured out how to get it to happen. Perhaps the above will
> help... Ben Myers
>
Hi, Ben,
I went here:
http://www.intel.com/support/motherb.../CS-012681.htm
and ran the tool. I got:
"No Intel® Desktop Board was detected in this system."
The instructions say, "If you get the message that an Intel desktop
board was not detected, you likely have an OEM desktop board."
I do have the Gateway E4600 System Manual, and it has very little
information about the BIOS screens. All it says is to press F1 to enter
the BIOS Setup Utility. I've done this many times, and set it as you've
suggested, with no luck. I have BIOS version GB85010A.15A.0011P13. I
updated from P12 a few days ago.The Gateway System Manual says I have an
Intel 850 chipset and an Intel Pentium 4 fc-pga Socket 423 processor
with a 400 MHz system.
The GB850 motherboards listed by Intel are :
D850EMD2
D850EMV2
D850GB
D850MD
D850MV
I checked all the manuals for the above boards, and they all say to
press F2 to enter the BIOS Setup Utility. My Gateway System Manual says
to press F1.
I'm at my wits end with this, because it should be as simple as going
into the BIOS Setup Utility, to the BOOT menu, and setting to boot from
ATAPI-CD. I've done this with many, many machines, including older
Gateways (PII). This should be a no brainer.
I do appreciate all the feed back.
Boris