No POST Beeps

  • Thread starter Thread starter Bruce
  • Start date Start date
Post beeps have nothing to do with the OS.. if you have no beeps or video
output, your system is dead.. if you press the power button, is your fan
starting?..
 
Is this computer new, at least, to you? Post beeps vary from one motherboard
to another. There is no post beep with mine, unless something is wrong. For
example, my video card was not properly seated and I started getting one
post beep. If it were 2 beeps it would be telling me something else. If your
system used to have a beep, the internal speaker may be disconnected or have
gone bad. If you are concerned because your new computer,if it is, does not
have a beep, don't worry it until you start getting one.

LOL, JAX
 
After coming back to this thread, I wonder if the OP was not confusing a
post beep with a selectable Windows "sound". It seems there is an option to
have a sound when the system is fully booted. I don't use any sounds and
don't remember for sure though.

JAX
 
There is an option for sounds at Windows startup for sure..

The computer illiterates (not meant as an insult) that post here have
problems differentiating between the basic functions of the computer, and
those that the installation of an operating system adds.. as you may well
know, one gets a BIOS beep at startup depending on what BIOS the motherboard
is using.. so this user has an XP-loaded computer with a BIOS that does not
beep, but may have had a previous computer loaded with W98 that did beep..
the possibility that the OP has heard another XP computer beep is a slim one
because he/she is questioning the lack of a beep in XP.. Windows, by
default, has never loaded a beep as the Windows Startup sound, but it did
load the most awful noise.. it would be difficult to confuse a post beep
with the default Windows start music.. we must therefore assume that the OP
is referring to the BIOS initialization beep, or lack of, in this case..

Determining solutions to what some people post requires a little bit of
thought, especially when trying to explain in layman's terms, but that is
half the fun of the newsgroups.. this leads me to something I have been
'dying' to ask.. re. XP backup, it does not appear in XP Home as part of the
default installation, and many who have 'Home' question this and ask how to
get it.. please, somebody tell me why they are advised where to get the
'backup' program on the basis that it will only allow access to the 'a'
drive UNLESS a tape drive is installed.. what are the chances of somebody
having a tape drive fitted over say, a CDRW?..

The
 
Back
Top