BlackburnKL
Programmer
Last night I ran into an interesting situation. A client's computer (running Windows XP Home) would not recognize the keyboard and would not boot. It gave the error indicated (I don't remember the exact wording, but what I wrote is close).
It wouldn't boot from the hard drive and it didn't attempt to boot from any of the other boot devices either. You couldn't use F5 or F8 to bypass the full boot process. You couldn't use any keystrokes to get into the CMOS either.
The problem turned out to be bent pins on the keyboard connector. With another keyboard, it works flawlessly!
I was a little surprised that a bent pin on the keyboard could cause that kind of an error, but it did.
I don't know how many others may ever encounter this type of situation, but thought I would post this just in case. It wasn't all that easy to track down. I guess we'll all have to be more careful when we plug things into the backs of our PCs. BlackburnKL
It wouldn't boot from the hard drive and it didn't attempt to boot from any of the other boot devices either. You couldn't use F5 or F8 to bypass the full boot process. You couldn't use any keystrokes to get into the CMOS either.
The problem turned out to be bent pins on the keyboard connector. With another keyboard, it works flawlessly!
I was a little surprised that a bent pin on the keyboard could cause that kind of an error, but it did.
I don't know how many others may ever encounter this type of situation, but thought I would post this just in case. It wasn't all that easy to track down. I guess we'll all have to be more careful when we plug things into the backs of our PCs. BlackburnKL