Black screen when trying to install ubuntu 13.10
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4
down vote
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I am in need of some help. It has been 2 weeks since I bought my first ever windows laptop with the aim of replacing windows but I have been unsuccessful.
The hardware is as follows :
Asus 15' F550D with A8 AMD processor and Radeon HD 8670M graphics
The laptops runs EFI "bios"
I managed to switch off Fastboot and Secure boot in EFI
so far I managed to to boot from USB which I mounted the Ubuntu 13.10 on but I can not get pass the GRUB menu as no matter when I chose I end up facing a black screen with back light on and I can not get anywhere beyond that.
I have tried the following with no success:
alternative versions of ubuntu ( 13.04 , 12.10 and Kubuntu 13.10 {all 64 bit}) problem remains.
editing the boot options in grub and using "nomodeset"
what can I try next ? any other suggestions ?
please help Windows 8 is sucking life out of me !!!
In a perfect world I would be aiming to have a dual boot system but if it's easier to lose the big virus living in my system , Windows 8, then i'm more than happy to go with that . ...
boot grub2 system-installation uefi
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
I am in need of some help. It has been 2 weeks since I bought my first ever windows laptop with the aim of replacing windows but I have been unsuccessful.
The hardware is as follows :
Asus 15' F550D with A8 AMD processor and Radeon HD 8670M graphics
The laptops runs EFI "bios"
I managed to switch off Fastboot and Secure boot in EFI
so far I managed to to boot from USB which I mounted the Ubuntu 13.10 on but I can not get pass the GRUB menu as no matter when I chose I end up facing a black screen with back light on and I can not get anywhere beyond that.
I have tried the following with no success:
alternative versions of ubuntu ( 13.04 , 12.10 and Kubuntu 13.10 {all 64 bit}) problem remains.
editing the boot options in grub and using "nomodeset"
what can I try next ? any other suggestions ?
please help Windows 8 is sucking life out of me !!!
In a perfect world I would be aiming to have a dual boot system but if it's easier to lose the big virus living in my system , Windows 8, then i'm more than happy to go with that . ...
boot grub2 system-installation uefi
You could try installing via a command line MinimalCD, but Ubuntu might not work after the install... I also believe that this can be done by another computer connected remotely :-s
– Wilf
Dec 21 '13 at 0:06
I got around it by connecting to external monitor.
– user230406
Dec 31 '13 at 12:44
possible duplicate of My computer boots to a black screen, what options do I have to fix it?
– Tim
May 27 '15 at 21:41
the potential issues are the partitioning sheme: you cannot boot"mbr" partitions on a "GPT" partitioned machine and vice versa. this partitioning can be set with multiarch installer usb but setting it is not the issue, rather matching it but let's set that asside a second it's possible the bootable usb you make are borked. try using (under windows) Rufus rufus.akeo.ie to make your ubuntu installer. it's the cleanest way I know of. also check your isos against checksums and consider newer (supported) versions of ubuntu. is there any reason why you're not getting the latest : AKA 17.04?
– tatsu
May 15 '17 at 9:20
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
up vote
4
down vote
favorite
I am in need of some help. It has been 2 weeks since I bought my first ever windows laptop with the aim of replacing windows but I have been unsuccessful.
The hardware is as follows :
Asus 15' F550D with A8 AMD processor and Radeon HD 8670M graphics
The laptops runs EFI "bios"
I managed to switch off Fastboot and Secure boot in EFI
so far I managed to to boot from USB which I mounted the Ubuntu 13.10 on but I can not get pass the GRUB menu as no matter when I chose I end up facing a black screen with back light on and I can not get anywhere beyond that.
I have tried the following with no success:
alternative versions of ubuntu ( 13.04 , 12.10 and Kubuntu 13.10 {all 64 bit}) problem remains.
editing the boot options in grub and using "nomodeset"
what can I try next ? any other suggestions ?
please help Windows 8 is sucking life out of me !!!
In a perfect world I would be aiming to have a dual boot system but if it's easier to lose the big virus living in my system , Windows 8, then i'm more than happy to go with that . ...
boot grub2 system-installation uefi
I am in need of some help. It has been 2 weeks since I bought my first ever windows laptop with the aim of replacing windows but I have been unsuccessful.
The hardware is as follows :
Asus 15' F550D with A8 AMD processor and Radeon HD 8670M graphics
The laptops runs EFI "bios"
I managed to switch off Fastboot and Secure boot in EFI
so far I managed to to boot from USB which I mounted the Ubuntu 13.10 on but I can not get pass the GRUB menu as no matter when I chose I end up facing a black screen with back light on and I can not get anywhere beyond that.
I have tried the following with no success:
alternative versions of ubuntu ( 13.04 , 12.10 and Kubuntu 13.10 {all 64 bit}) problem remains.
editing the boot options in grub and using "nomodeset"
what can I try next ? any other suggestions ?
please help Windows 8 is sucking life out of me !!!
In a perfect world I would be aiming to have a dual boot system but if it's easier to lose the big virus living in my system , Windows 8, then i'm more than happy to go with that . ...
boot grub2 system-installation uefi
boot grub2 system-installation uefi
edited May 27 '15 at 21:40
Tim
19.5k1484138
19.5k1484138
asked Dec 20 '13 at 23:09
user226347
2112
2112
You could try installing via a command line MinimalCD, but Ubuntu might not work after the install... I also believe that this can be done by another computer connected remotely :-s
– Wilf
Dec 21 '13 at 0:06
I got around it by connecting to external monitor.
– user230406
Dec 31 '13 at 12:44
possible duplicate of My computer boots to a black screen, what options do I have to fix it?
– Tim
May 27 '15 at 21:41
the potential issues are the partitioning sheme: you cannot boot"mbr" partitions on a "GPT" partitioned machine and vice versa. this partitioning can be set with multiarch installer usb but setting it is not the issue, rather matching it but let's set that asside a second it's possible the bootable usb you make are borked. try using (under windows) Rufus rufus.akeo.ie to make your ubuntu installer. it's the cleanest way I know of. also check your isos against checksums and consider newer (supported) versions of ubuntu. is there any reason why you're not getting the latest : AKA 17.04?
– tatsu
May 15 '17 at 9:20
add a comment |
You could try installing via a command line MinimalCD, but Ubuntu might not work after the install... I also believe that this can be done by another computer connected remotely :-s
– Wilf
Dec 21 '13 at 0:06
I got around it by connecting to external monitor.
– user230406
Dec 31 '13 at 12:44
possible duplicate of My computer boots to a black screen, what options do I have to fix it?
– Tim
May 27 '15 at 21:41
the potential issues are the partitioning sheme: you cannot boot"mbr" partitions on a "GPT" partitioned machine and vice versa. this partitioning can be set with multiarch installer usb but setting it is not the issue, rather matching it but let's set that asside a second it's possible the bootable usb you make are borked. try using (under windows) Rufus rufus.akeo.ie to make your ubuntu installer. it's the cleanest way I know of. also check your isos against checksums and consider newer (supported) versions of ubuntu. is there any reason why you're not getting the latest : AKA 17.04?
– tatsu
May 15 '17 at 9:20
You could try installing via a command line MinimalCD, but Ubuntu might not work after the install... I also believe that this can be done by another computer connected remotely :-s
– Wilf
Dec 21 '13 at 0:06
You could try installing via a command line MinimalCD, but Ubuntu might not work after the install... I also believe that this can be done by another computer connected remotely :-s
– Wilf
Dec 21 '13 at 0:06
I got around it by connecting to external monitor.
– user230406
Dec 31 '13 at 12:44
I got around it by connecting to external monitor.
– user230406
Dec 31 '13 at 12:44
possible duplicate of My computer boots to a black screen, what options do I have to fix it?
– Tim
May 27 '15 at 21:41
possible duplicate of My computer boots to a black screen, what options do I have to fix it?
– Tim
May 27 '15 at 21:41
the potential issues are the partitioning sheme: you cannot boot"mbr" partitions on a "GPT" partitioned machine and vice versa. this partitioning can be set with multiarch installer usb but setting it is not the issue, rather matching it but let's set that asside a second it's possible the bootable usb you make are borked. try using (under windows) Rufus rufus.akeo.ie to make your ubuntu installer. it's the cleanest way I know of. also check your isos against checksums and consider newer (supported) versions of ubuntu. is there any reason why you're not getting the latest : AKA 17.04?
– tatsu
May 15 '17 at 9:20
the potential issues are the partitioning sheme: you cannot boot"mbr" partitions on a "GPT" partitioned machine and vice versa. this partitioning can be set with multiarch installer usb but setting it is not the issue, rather matching it but let's set that asside a second it's possible the bootable usb you make are borked. try using (under windows) Rufus rufus.akeo.ie to make your ubuntu installer. it's the cleanest way I know of. also check your isos against checksums and consider newer (supported) versions of ubuntu. is there any reason why you're not getting the latest : AKA 17.04?
– tatsu
May 15 '17 at 9:20
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
This may sound stupid, but I think I may have (had) similar problem with my new Windows 8 preinstalled Lenovo G710 laptop. Here it is simply that after booting Ubuntu or - for example - GParted Live CD, the screen brightness is automatically set to zero. On this particular laptop I use I can control brightness by F11/F12 (or Fn+F11/Fn+F12 depending on BIOS setup's switch). I'm sorry if I misunderstood your problem.
Edit: not "set to zero brightness" but screen set off and therefore not F12 but F9 here ;).
1
zero backlight and black screen is not the same.
– Alvar
Dec 21 '13 at 1:45
I wish it was as simple as that .. I have tied no to success ... thanks for your reply ...
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 4:56
has anyone got any other ideas ? solutions ?
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 20:47
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I have the same problem. I put in the CD, get the little install logo, then the screen goes black.
It has to do with the Radeon graphics card. When I install Puppy Slack, it works, but other distros just go to black screens. Can't even get to a point where I can uninstall NVIDIA.
I found a solution here:
http://turriebuntu.wordpress.com/general-ubuntu-pages/ubuntu-boot-freeze-lockup-it-stops-with-a-blank-purple-or-black-screen/
Copied and pasted just in case the link goes down:
Installed Ubuntu lockup
After you’ve installed Ubuntu the lockup is likely to return. The workaround is slightly different. Start your computer, and press the Shift when booting up, to get the Grub menu. Use the arrow keys to navigate/highlight the entry you want (it’s usually the first one).
Press “e” to get into edit mode. then look for the line containing “
.... quiet splash ....
using the arro keys move your cursor just past this point and enter the word nomodeset so that you now have:
.... quiet splash nomodeset ........
and press
Ctrl-x
to continue booting.
At that point you will need to make the change permanent. Open a terminal and:
gksudo gedit /etc/default/grub
Find this line:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=”quiet splash”
and modify it to give:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=”quiet splash nomodeset″
Save your changes close gedit and run:
sudo update-grub
At that point and you should no longer freeze during bootup.
As this is not a constructive answer, please consider posting informations like these as a comment in the future.
– Daniel W.
Mar 10 '14 at 14:47
Understood. My bad. I'm going to edit it to include new information that's actually helpful.
– Velli
Mar 11 '14 at 23:06
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
In my case it turned out to be the built-in video drivers dropping the screen backlight brightness down to zero.
I had attempted to install Linux Mint 17.1 and Linux Mint 201403 on a Lenovo G710. Simply using the keyboard controls to adjust the screen brightness allowed me to continue with the install.
The answer from user227444 was helpful in this scenario.
If the issue is due to kernal mod incompatibility it may be wise to explicitly specify the mod to use in the grub startup script as defined here: http://community.linuxmint.com/tutorial/view/842
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
If You have BIOS with UEFI/EFI You should disable this option in it (BIOS menu -> boot options) - than You will be able to use Your external OS on USB to install it in on Your hard drive.
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
This may sound stupid, but I think I may have (had) similar problem with my new Windows 8 preinstalled Lenovo G710 laptop. Here it is simply that after booting Ubuntu or - for example - GParted Live CD, the screen brightness is automatically set to zero. On this particular laptop I use I can control brightness by F11/F12 (or Fn+F11/Fn+F12 depending on BIOS setup's switch). I'm sorry if I misunderstood your problem.
Edit: not "set to zero brightness" but screen set off and therefore not F12 but F9 here ;).
1
zero backlight and black screen is not the same.
– Alvar
Dec 21 '13 at 1:45
I wish it was as simple as that .. I have tied no to success ... thanks for your reply ...
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 4:56
has anyone got any other ideas ? solutions ?
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 20:47
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
This may sound stupid, but I think I may have (had) similar problem with my new Windows 8 preinstalled Lenovo G710 laptop. Here it is simply that after booting Ubuntu or - for example - GParted Live CD, the screen brightness is automatically set to zero. On this particular laptop I use I can control brightness by F11/F12 (or Fn+F11/Fn+F12 depending on BIOS setup's switch). I'm sorry if I misunderstood your problem.
Edit: not "set to zero brightness" but screen set off and therefore not F12 but F9 here ;).
1
zero backlight and black screen is not the same.
– Alvar
Dec 21 '13 at 1:45
I wish it was as simple as that .. I have tied no to success ... thanks for your reply ...
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 4:56
has anyone got any other ideas ? solutions ?
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 20:47
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
This may sound stupid, but I think I may have (had) similar problem with my new Windows 8 preinstalled Lenovo G710 laptop. Here it is simply that after booting Ubuntu or - for example - GParted Live CD, the screen brightness is automatically set to zero. On this particular laptop I use I can control brightness by F11/F12 (or Fn+F11/Fn+F12 depending on BIOS setup's switch). I'm sorry if I misunderstood your problem.
Edit: not "set to zero brightness" but screen set off and therefore not F12 but F9 here ;).
This may sound stupid, but I think I may have (had) similar problem with my new Windows 8 preinstalled Lenovo G710 laptop. Here it is simply that after booting Ubuntu or - for example - GParted Live CD, the screen brightness is automatically set to zero. On this particular laptop I use I can control brightness by F11/F12 (or Fn+F11/Fn+F12 depending on BIOS setup's switch). I'm sorry if I misunderstood your problem.
Edit: not "set to zero brightness" but screen set off and therefore not F12 but F9 here ;).
answered Dec 21 '13 at 1:21
user227444
1
zero backlight and black screen is not the same.
– Alvar
Dec 21 '13 at 1:45
I wish it was as simple as that .. I have tied no to success ... thanks for your reply ...
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 4:56
has anyone got any other ideas ? solutions ?
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 20:47
add a comment |
1
zero backlight and black screen is not the same.
– Alvar
Dec 21 '13 at 1:45
I wish it was as simple as that .. I have tied no to success ... thanks for your reply ...
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 4:56
has anyone got any other ideas ? solutions ?
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 20:47
1
1
zero backlight and black screen is not the same.
– Alvar
Dec 21 '13 at 1:45
zero backlight and black screen is not the same.
– Alvar
Dec 21 '13 at 1:45
I wish it was as simple as that .. I have tied no to success ... thanks for your reply ...
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 4:56
I wish it was as simple as that .. I have tied no to success ... thanks for your reply ...
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 4:56
has anyone got any other ideas ? solutions ?
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 20:47
has anyone got any other ideas ? solutions ?
– user226347
Dec 21 '13 at 20:47
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I have the same problem. I put in the CD, get the little install logo, then the screen goes black.
It has to do with the Radeon graphics card. When I install Puppy Slack, it works, but other distros just go to black screens. Can't even get to a point where I can uninstall NVIDIA.
I found a solution here:
http://turriebuntu.wordpress.com/general-ubuntu-pages/ubuntu-boot-freeze-lockup-it-stops-with-a-blank-purple-or-black-screen/
Copied and pasted just in case the link goes down:
Installed Ubuntu lockup
After you’ve installed Ubuntu the lockup is likely to return. The workaround is slightly different. Start your computer, and press the Shift when booting up, to get the Grub menu. Use the arrow keys to navigate/highlight the entry you want (it’s usually the first one).
Press “e” to get into edit mode. then look for the line containing “
.... quiet splash ....
using the arro keys move your cursor just past this point and enter the word nomodeset so that you now have:
.... quiet splash nomodeset ........
and press
Ctrl-x
to continue booting.
At that point you will need to make the change permanent. Open a terminal and:
gksudo gedit /etc/default/grub
Find this line:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=”quiet splash”
and modify it to give:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=”quiet splash nomodeset″
Save your changes close gedit and run:
sudo update-grub
At that point and you should no longer freeze during bootup.
As this is not a constructive answer, please consider posting informations like these as a comment in the future.
– Daniel W.
Mar 10 '14 at 14:47
Understood. My bad. I'm going to edit it to include new information that's actually helpful.
– Velli
Mar 11 '14 at 23:06
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I have the same problem. I put in the CD, get the little install logo, then the screen goes black.
It has to do with the Radeon graphics card. When I install Puppy Slack, it works, but other distros just go to black screens. Can't even get to a point where I can uninstall NVIDIA.
I found a solution here:
http://turriebuntu.wordpress.com/general-ubuntu-pages/ubuntu-boot-freeze-lockup-it-stops-with-a-blank-purple-or-black-screen/
Copied and pasted just in case the link goes down:
Installed Ubuntu lockup
After you’ve installed Ubuntu the lockup is likely to return. The workaround is slightly different. Start your computer, and press the Shift when booting up, to get the Grub menu. Use the arrow keys to navigate/highlight the entry you want (it’s usually the first one).
Press “e” to get into edit mode. then look for the line containing “
.... quiet splash ....
using the arro keys move your cursor just past this point and enter the word nomodeset so that you now have:
.... quiet splash nomodeset ........
and press
Ctrl-x
to continue booting.
At that point you will need to make the change permanent. Open a terminal and:
gksudo gedit /etc/default/grub
Find this line:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=”quiet splash”
and modify it to give:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=”quiet splash nomodeset″
Save your changes close gedit and run:
sudo update-grub
At that point and you should no longer freeze during bootup.
As this is not a constructive answer, please consider posting informations like these as a comment in the future.
– Daniel W.
Mar 10 '14 at 14:47
Understood. My bad. I'm going to edit it to include new information that's actually helpful.
– Velli
Mar 11 '14 at 23:06
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
I have the same problem. I put in the CD, get the little install logo, then the screen goes black.
It has to do with the Radeon graphics card. When I install Puppy Slack, it works, but other distros just go to black screens. Can't even get to a point where I can uninstall NVIDIA.
I found a solution here:
http://turriebuntu.wordpress.com/general-ubuntu-pages/ubuntu-boot-freeze-lockup-it-stops-with-a-blank-purple-or-black-screen/
Copied and pasted just in case the link goes down:
Installed Ubuntu lockup
After you’ve installed Ubuntu the lockup is likely to return. The workaround is slightly different. Start your computer, and press the Shift when booting up, to get the Grub menu. Use the arrow keys to navigate/highlight the entry you want (it’s usually the first one).
Press “e” to get into edit mode. then look for the line containing “
.... quiet splash ....
using the arro keys move your cursor just past this point and enter the word nomodeset so that you now have:
.... quiet splash nomodeset ........
and press
Ctrl-x
to continue booting.
At that point you will need to make the change permanent. Open a terminal and:
gksudo gedit /etc/default/grub
Find this line:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=”quiet splash”
and modify it to give:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=”quiet splash nomodeset″
Save your changes close gedit and run:
sudo update-grub
At that point and you should no longer freeze during bootup.
I have the same problem. I put in the CD, get the little install logo, then the screen goes black.
It has to do with the Radeon graphics card. When I install Puppy Slack, it works, but other distros just go to black screens. Can't even get to a point where I can uninstall NVIDIA.
I found a solution here:
http://turriebuntu.wordpress.com/general-ubuntu-pages/ubuntu-boot-freeze-lockup-it-stops-with-a-blank-purple-or-black-screen/
Copied and pasted just in case the link goes down:
Installed Ubuntu lockup
After you’ve installed Ubuntu the lockup is likely to return. The workaround is slightly different. Start your computer, and press the Shift when booting up, to get the Grub menu. Use the arrow keys to navigate/highlight the entry you want (it’s usually the first one).
Press “e” to get into edit mode. then look for the line containing “
.... quiet splash ....
using the arro keys move your cursor just past this point and enter the word nomodeset so that you now have:
.... quiet splash nomodeset ........
and press
Ctrl-x
to continue booting.
At that point you will need to make the change permanent. Open a terminal and:
gksudo gedit /etc/default/grub
Find this line:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=”quiet splash”
and modify it to give:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT=”quiet splash nomodeset″
Save your changes close gedit and run:
sudo update-grub
At that point and you should no longer freeze during bootup.
edited Mar 11 '14 at 23:10
answered Mar 10 '14 at 14:21
Velli
11
11
As this is not a constructive answer, please consider posting informations like these as a comment in the future.
– Daniel W.
Mar 10 '14 at 14:47
Understood. My bad. I'm going to edit it to include new information that's actually helpful.
– Velli
Mar 11 '14 at 23:06
add a comment |
As this is not a constructive answer, please consider posting informations like these as a comment in the future.
– Daniel W.
Mar 10 '14 at 14:47
Understood. My bad. I'm going to edit it to include new information that's actually helpful.
– Velli
Mar 11 '14 at 23:06
As this is not a constructive answer, please consider posting informations like these as a comment in the future.
– Daniel W.
Mar 10 '14 at 14:47
As this is not a constructive answer, please consider posting informations like these as a comment in the future.
– Daniel W.
Mar 10 '14 at 14:47
Understood. My bad. I'm going to edit it to include new information that's actually helpful.
– Velli
Mar 11 '14 at 23:06
Understood. My bad. I'm going to edit it to include new information that's actually helpful.
– Velli
Mar 11 '14 at 23:06
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
In my case it turned out to be the built-in video drivers dropping the screen backlight brightness down to zero.
I had attempted to install Linux Mint 17.1 and Linux Mint 201403 on a Lenovo G710. Simply using the keyboard controls to adjust the screen brightness allowed me to continue with the install.
The answer from user227444 was helpful in this scenario.
If the issue is due to kernal mod incompatibility it may be wise to explicitly specify the mod to use in the grub startup script as defined here: http://community.linuxmint.com/tutorial/view/842
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
In my case it turned out to be the built-in video drivers dropping the screen backlight brightness down to zero.
I had attempted to install Linux Mint 17.1 and Linux Mint 201403 on a Lenovo G710. Simply using the keyboard controls to adjust the screen brightness allowed me to continue with the install.
The answer from user227444 was helpful in this scenario.
If the issue is due to kernal mod incompatibility it may be wise to explicitly specify the mod to use in the grub startup script as defined here: http://community.linuxmint.com/tutorial/view/842
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
In my case it turned out to be the built-in video drivers dropping the screen backlight brightness down to zero.
I had attempted to install Linux Mint 17.1 and Linux Mint 201403 on a Lenovo G710. Simply using the keyboard controls to adjust the screen brightness allowed me to continue with the install.
The answer from user227444 was helpful in this scenario.
If the issue is due to kernal mod incompatibility it may be wise to explicitly specify the mod to use in the grub startup script as defined here: http://community.linuxmint.com/tutorial/view/842
In my case it turned out to be the built-in video drivers dropping the screen backlight brightness down to zero.
I had attempted to install Linux Mint 17.1 and Linux Mint 201403 on a Lenovo G710. Simply using the keyboard controls to adjust the screen brightness allowed me to continue with the install.
The answer from user227444 was helpful in this scenario.
If the issue is due to kernal mod incompatibility it may be wise to explicitly specify the mod to use in the grub startup script as defined here: http://community.linuxmint.com/tutorial/view/842
answered Jan 5 '15 at 3:52
user1660317
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1
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If You have BIOS with UEFI/EFI You should disable this option in it (BIOS menu -> boot options) - than You will be able to use Your external OS on USB to install it in on Your hard drive.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
If You have BIOS with UEFI/EFI You should disable this option in it (BIOS menu -> boot options) - than You will be able to use Your external OS on USB to install it in on Your hard drive.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
If You have BIOS with UEFI/EFI You should disable this option in it (BIOS menu -> boot options) - than You will be able to use Your external OS on USB to install it in on Your hard drive.
If You have BIOS with UEFI/EFI You should disable this option in it (BIOS menu -> boot options) - than You will be able to use Your external OS on USB to install it in on Your hard drive.
answered Feb 26 '16 at 9:34
user3799089
12
12
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You could try installing via a command line MinimalCD, but Ubuntu might not work after the install... I also believe that this can be done by another computer connected remotely :-s
– Wilf
Dec 21 '13 at 0:06
I got around it by connecting to external monitor.
– user230406
Dec 31 '13 at 12:44
possible duplicate of My computer boots to a black screen, what options do I have to fix it?
– Tim
May 27 '15 at 21:41
the potential issues are the partitioning sheme: you cannot boot"mbr" partitions on a "GPT" partitioned machine and vice versa. this partitioning can be set with multiarch installer usb but setting it is not the issue, rather matching it but let's set that asside a second it's possible the bootable usb you make are borked. try using (under windows) Rufus rufus.akeo.ie to make your ubuntu installer. it's the cleanest way I know of. also check your isos against checksums and consider newer (supported) versions of ubuntu. is there any reason why you're not getting the latest : AKA 17.04?
– tatsu
May 15 '17 at 9:20