R
River_Rat
http://www.michaelstevenstech.com/bios_manufacturer.htm
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Good Day
River Rat
I have 8 Dell PCs around me right now.. Ranging from the Dimension to the
Optiplex series (and a PowerEdge server) - only the OLDER Dell systems used
"DEL" to eneter the BIOS. The models for the past 5+ years have used the F2
key commonly. The only make I cannot vouch for in the Dell line would be
the Precision Workstations.
The truth of the matter is, it is up to the person sitting in front of the
machine to read the message that tells them what key to press unless they
turned off that message. Then they can find out by flooding the keyboard
buffer at startup and forcing a "keyboard error" message and it will tell
them how to get into the BIOS.. Of course they could turn that off too
(keyboard error checking) - but what are you going to do - at that point -
break out the manual or contact the manufacturer!
--
Good Day
River Rat
Derry said:2 I have a Dell and he is right, delete IS the key to get into the
BIOS.
I have 8 Dell PCs around me right now.. Ranging from the Dimension to the
Optiplex series (and a PowerEdge server) - only the OLDER Dell systems used
"DEL" to eneter the BIOS. The models for the past 5+ years have used the F2
key commonly. The only make I cannot vouch for in the Dell line would be
the Precision Workstations.
The truth of the matter is, it is up to the person sitting in front of the
machine to read the message that tells them what key to press unless they
turned off that message. Then they can find out by flooding the keyboard
buffer at startup and forcing a "keyboard error" message and it will tell
them how to get into the BIOS.. Of course they could turn that off too
(keyboard error checking) - but what are you going to do - at that point -
break out the manual or contact the manufacturer!