thecomputerguy
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 1,407
Client had a 13 month old $1500 laptop die 1 month out of warranty. I keep a spare on hand for this client for situations like this so they don't have an employee out of work until I can get another one. This dead one will be the new spare as I extended the warranty through Dell for a couple hundred and then I'm going to have them replace the motherboard on it (no power).
I though oh great! no problem I'll just swap the drive! Of course the drive is encrypted. I login to the users O365 account and extract the BitLocker key and get it to boot. I now realized that the BL key was required every time. So I came up with the bright idea of decrypting the drive and leaving it decrypted (it's not necessary here).
After decrypted it would boot normally but now none of her services worked (this is my first experience with this). They use OneDrive, Teams, Sharepoint, Outlook ... the whole suite. I brute forced the removal of her account out of the system (Accounts > Work and School > Remove) and then started brute forcing re-logins to OneDrive, Teams, Outlook etc.
When logging into these services I get TPM errors every time I logged back in but despite the TPM errors the accounts seemed to work fine and the computer seems to operate normally for now.
I know this is not the correct way to do this ... am I supposed to transplant the drive, decrypt it, then go in to the BIOS and reset TPM? Then logins should happen as normal?
I though oh great! no problem I'll just swap the drive! Of course the drive is encrypted. I login to the users O365 account and extract the BitLocker key and get it to boot. I now realized that the BL key was required every time. So I came up with the bright idea of decrypting the drive and leaving it decrypted (it's not necessary here).
After decrypted it would boot normally but now none of her services worked (this is my first experience with this). They use OneDrive, Teams, Sharepoint, Outlook ... the whole suite. I brute forced the removal of her account out of the system (Accounts > Work and School > Remove) and then started brute forcing re-logins to OneDrive, Teams, Outlook etc.
When logging into these services I get TPM errors every time I logged back in but despite the TPM errors the accounts seemed to work fine and the computer seems to operate normally for now.
I know this is not the correct way to do this ... am I supposed to transplant the drive, decrypt it, then go in to the BIOS and reset TPM? Then logins should happen as normal?