britechguy
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 4,687
- Location
- Staunton, VA
I had a new client yesterday, a local real estate agent, who now has two of these machines, one less than 5 years old that's running an i7-8th gen processor and the other only a couple of months old with an i7-13th gen (I think, it might be 12th).
In any case both of these machines have exhibited problems that I find very uncharacteristic in this class. She reports that the older one has problems with the trackpad just freezing up, but I could not replicate during the service call. The newer one has been freezing at random and, of course, would not do so for me.
I ran the HP support assistant on both and each of them needed a UEFI/BIOS update, which I got and applied. Afterward, I ran DISM/SFC, then, for "ultra-good measure" I did a Windows 11 Repair Install on both using the Windows 11 23H2 ISO freshly downloaded from Microsoft.
The newer one also appears to have a dead USB-C port, though it's old style USB-A port is just fine. The older one has both USB-A and USB-C ports functioning just fine.
I also encountered another "fun thing" with BitLocker, and that's that you cannot do a UEFI/BIOS update while it is active. The BIOS updater tells you this and that it will disable BitLocker before the update and re-enable it afterward, but they advise against doing this unless you have the BitLocker key, which we did not and which I could not find on the Microsoft Account for these laptops (both were using the same xxx@outlook.com address for the only account on the computer, which was, of course, also admin). I disabled BitLocker using manage-bde and left it off after having done the UEFI/BIOS update on each without issue.
I'm just waiting for a follow-up call, as I fear a nuke and pave will be necessary, but I did not want to go that route first. Just wondering if these machines have any sort of reputation I'm not aware of.
In any case both of these machines have exhibited problems that I find very uncharacteristic in this class. She reports that the older one has problems with the trackpad just freezing up, but I could not replicate during the service call. The newer one has been freezing at random and, of course, would not do so for me.
I ran the HP support assistant on both and each of them needed a UEFI/BIOS update, which I got and applied. Afterward, I ran DISM/SFC, then, for "ultra-good measure" I did a Windows 11 Repair Install on both using the Windows 11 23H2 ISO freshly downloaded from Microsoft.
The newer one also appears to have a dead USB-C port, though it's old style USB-A port is just fine. The older one has both USB-A and USB-C ports functioning just fine.
I also encountered another "fun thing" with BitLocker, and that's that you cannot do a UEFI/BIOS update while it is active. The BIOS updater tells you this and that it will disable BitLocker before the update and re-enable it afterward, but they advise against doing this unless you have the BitLocker key, which we did not and which I could not find on the Microsoft Account for these laptops (both were using the same xxx@outlook.com address for the only account on the computer, which was, of course, also admin). I disabled BitLocker using manage-bde and left it off after having done the UEFI/BIOS update on each without issue.
I'm just waiting for a follow-up call, as I fear a nuke and pave will be necessary, but I did not want to go that route first. Just wondering if these machines have any sort of reputation I'm not aware of.