Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
Heads up, this deal has expired. Want to create a deal alert for this item?
expireddelz4stelz posted Nov 07, 2019 08:31 AM
expireddelz4stelz posted Nov 07, 2019 08:31 AM

Costco Members: HP 14" Laptop: i3-1005G1, 4GB DDR4, 128GB SSD, Win 10 S

+ Free Shipping

$280

$400

30% off
Costco Wholesale
4,262 Comments 1,058,827 Views
Visit Retailer
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Costco Wholesale has for its Members: HP 14" Laptop (14-dq1033cl) on sale for $279.99. Shipping is free. Thanks delz4stelz

Note, non-members are subject to a 5% surcharge making total $299.99

Specs:
  • Intel Core i3-1005G1 1.2GHz Processor
  • 14" IPS BrightView WLED-Backlit FHD 1920x1080 Display
  • 4GB DDR4 2666 SDRAM
  • 128GB M.2 Solid State Drive
  • Intel UHD Graphics
  • 802.11ac (2x2) Wifi + Bluetooth 5.0
  • 3-Cell 41WHr Lithium-Ion Battery
  • Windows 10 S Mode
  • Weight: 3.24 lbs
  • Ports:
    • 1x USB 3.1 Type-C
    • 2x USB 3.1 Type-A
    • 1x HDMI 1.4b
    • 1x Multi-Format Digital Media Card Reader
    • 1x Combination Headphone-Out/Microphone-In Jack

Editor's Notes

Written by slickdewmaster | Staff
Offer is valid through November 21, 2019. Includes 2-Year warranty. -slickdewmaster

Original Post

Written by delz4stelz
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Costco Wholesale has for its Members: HP 14" Laptop (14-dq1033cl) on sale for $279.99. Shipping is free. Thanks delz4stelz

Note, non-members are subject to a 5% surcharge making total $299.99

Specs:
  • Intel Core i3-1005G1 1.2GHz Processor
  • 14" IPS BrightView WLED-Backlit FHD 1920x1080 Display
  • 4GB DDR4 2666 SDRAM
  • 128GB M.2 Solid State Drive
  • Intel UHD Graphics
  • 802.11ac (2x2) Wifi + Bluetooth 5.0
  • 3-Cell 41WHr Lithium-Ion Battery
  • Windows 10 S Mode
  • Weight: 3.24 lbs
  • Ports:
    • 1x USB 3.1 Type-C
    • 2x USB 3.1 Type-A
    • 1x HDMI 1.4b
    • 1x Multi-Format Digital Media Card Reader
    • 1x Combination Headphone-Out/Microphone-In Jack

Editor's Notes

Written by slickdewmaster | Staff
Offer is valid through November 21, 2019. Includes 2-Year warranty. -slickdewmaster

Original Post

Written by delz4stelz

Community Voting

Deal Score
+438
Good Deal
Visit Retailer

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Top Comments

jackt
224 Posts
205 Reputation
I've already opened up and upgraded this laptop.


Removing the back cover to do upgrades:
There are 8 Philips-head screws altogether, all on the back cover. 4 of them are underneath the two rubber strips. The rubber strips are attached using double-sided tape with a strong adhesive, so be careful when removing them and try not to separate the tape from the rubber strip. Tip from @msk12: Heat up and loosen the adhesive before removing the rubber feet. I haven't done this before, but maybe a blow dryer or a cloth bag filled with microwaved uncooked rice would work. You don't need to completely remove the rubber strips- just peel back enough to expose the screws. There is an image of all the screw locations in the link below. Also be careful not to pull outward or pull very hard, as you'll stretch the rubber strip that way. Just very slowly but firmly pull it upward, almost as if you are rolling it off. You'll need a pretty thin plastic spudger to detach all the clips holding the bottom cover to the laptop. A credit card may be too thick. Photos of the inside of the laptop, the inside of the back cover, the screw locations, and where to use the spudger to remove the back cover: https://imgur.com/a/zXufcNv


CPU:
The CPU is indeed an i5-1035G4. I got two of them in Los Angeles and both have this CPU. At first I couldn't believe it, but I ran CPU-Z and it's definitely confirmed. On 11/15/19 two people confirmed that they received units with the same model number but with the i3 CPU. The side of the box will say which CPU is in the box- there are some posts in this thread showing a picture of the label on the side of the box. When buying at the warehouse, I recommend going to the merchandise pickup window first and asking to see the side of the box to confirm that it has the i5 CPU. Then ask them nicely to hold that box for a few minutes while you go pay for it at checkout.

One point of concern is that in the pre-installed HP Support Assistant app as well as on the motherboard it says "model number 14-dq1033cl". The spec sheet for that model on the HP website says the CPU is an Intel® Core™ i3-1005G1. https://support.hp.com/us-en/document/c06463284 Not sure what would happen if this computer needs a warranty motherboard/CPU replacement. if you check Windows System Information for the model number, it says "HP Laptop 14-dq1xxx".

Intel has had a lot of production problems with these 10nm Ice Lake chips. My theory on why this system has this upgraded CPU is that at the last minute Intel had trouble supplying the lower-end i3 chips so they or HP decided to just use these i5 chips so they can meet Costco's delivery expectations. HP would not normally pair this CPU with such little memory and slow SATA storage.


Integrated Graphics:
The new Ice Lake CPUs come with 3 integrated graphics options, as indicated by the last 2 characters in the CPU's model number:
- G1, basic
- G4, intermediate
- G7, highest level

G4 and G7 are labeled Iris Plus Graphics. This model has G4 graphics.


Storage:
The laptop comes with a M.2 SATA interface SSD, but I replaced it with a HP EX920 1TB NVMe SSD. The new SSD works just fine, so this laptop is compatible with NVMe drives. The easiest way to put Windows on a new SSD drive would be:
1) create a recovery thumb drive from the laptop itself, within Windows. Start menu > Recovery Drive
2) Swap out the SSD
3) Boot up to the USB drive. Just insert the thumb drive and turn on the laptop. It'll boot from the USB drive when it can't find an operating system on your new SSD drive.
4) Restore windows to the new SSD drive from the USB drive.

There are a number of posts in this thread with instructions on how to do a clean installation of Windows, which would install Windows without the bloatware that came with the laptop. It's easy to get stuck in a Catch-22 using this method, where you need to connect to the internet to exit S Mode before you can install the WiFi driver and all the other drivers, but you can't exit S Mode or connect to the internet until you've installed the WiFi driver. If you want to go this route, be sure to read the thread carefully and have a plan for installing the WiFi driver.

There is a space next to the battery where a 2.5" drive would fit, but if you look at the photo I attached of the inside of the back cover you'll see that there's a lattice-like grid on it to give that empty space some rigidity. I haven't tried, but it looks like you cannot put a 2.5" drive there.


Memory:
There are 2 upgradable SODIMM slots. No DRAM is soldered to the motherboard. The laptop comes with a single 4GB SODIMM, and 1 empty slot. I installed Crucial 16GB Kit (8GBx2) DDR4 2666 MT/s (PC4-21300) SR x8 SODIMM 260-Pin Memory - CT2K8G4SFS8266 and it works well. The Crucial website actually recommends DDR4 3200, but the 4GB SODIMM that came with the laptop is DDR4 2666.


WiFi/Bluetooth - Support for WiFi 6:
The laptop comes with a Realtek RTL8822CE 2x2 WiFi AC + BT 5 module. They're used in a lot of laptops, including models that are much more expensive than this one. However, there are definitely more complaints about problems with the Realtek wireless cards compared to the Intel cards on the HP support forums, so I decided to switch to an Intel card since I had the laptop opened up anyway. This laptop will work with an Intel WiFi AX200 WiFi 6 + Bluetooth 5 module. You're gonna need to have the AX200 driver on a thumb drive before you install the WiFi module, as you won't be able to connect to the internet to download the new driver after you replace the Realtek module that came with the laptop. https://downloadcenter.intel.com/...Fi-6-AX200


No USB-C charging or DisplayPort/HDMI output via USB-C:
As per the specs, the USB-C port doesn't have Power Delivery or Extended USB-C capabilities (namely DisplayPort & HDMI output). So essentially the USB-C port functions like a regular USB 3.0 Type-A port. Someone in this thread tested this and confirmed that this model has no charging or video output through the USB-C port.


Fan noise:
I've been using two of these laptops for several days now. I'm pretty sensitive to fan noise because my prior laptop has a very quiet fan, even at its highest speed. The fan on this HP seems to have two or three speeds. The lowest speed I can only hear if I put my ear to the unit. I'm not even sure there is a low fan speed- I may just be hearing the components hum. The medium setting I find noticeable but not a big deal since I usually have music or a podcast on when I'm working. The high setting definitely is distracting. Both of my units have a very faint high-pitched whine when the fan is spinning at high, slightly more noticeable on one unit than the other.

After all the setting up and updating is done, when you're just using it, the fan doesn't ramp up that often. And when it does turn on, it doesn't stay on medium or high speed for very long. It runs quiet 90-95% of the time for me. This is for regular web browsing and office apps, either on my lap or on my desk connected to a DisplayLink device driving two 1920x1200 displays and a bunch of peripherals. When it's on my desk it's on a stand that's open underneath to allow for ventilation.


Loose and rattling touchpad:
One of my units came with a loose touchpad that made a clicking sound when I tapped on it very lightly. Here's how to fix a loose touchpad on this unit: https://imgur.com/a/zXufcNv
Start with the photo that says "Removing the battery"


DisplayLink bug and installing drivers not pre-approved by HP:
If you have one of those popular DisplayLink USB 3.0 docking stations, there's a bug with Chrome's hardware acceleration mode that causes a lot of lag on screens that are driven by the DisplayLink device. To fix it, you need to install the latest Intel graphics driver. HP blocks the usual method of running the downloaded executable, so you will have to download the driver ZIP file and install it in Device Manager.
Intel graphics driver ZIP file: https://downloadcenter.intel.com/...uct=197599
Special instructions for installing the driver (regular method won't work): https://www.intel.co.uk/content/w...ivers.html
You can follow those same instructions to install drivers that HP hasn't vetted and approved yet, when the executable driver installation file doesn't work.


Changing from Windows 10 Home S Mode to regular Windows 10 Home:
Instructions here: https://support.microsoft.com/en-...-of-s-mode
Also, the BIOS it came with is F.04, which looks like the most current version. I downloaded the BIOS update from the HP website and installed it anyway for good measure. After I did that, it reverted my Windows installation back to S Mode and I could not get it to switch out of S mode. I had to reset Windows and then I was able to switch it out of S mode again. https://support.microsoft.com/en-...-reinstall
One major concern with this issue is that future BIOS updates may have the same bug, and setting up Windows all over again after having used the computer for a while may be a lot of work.


Costco Price Adjustment:
If you bought this laptop at $400 before it went on sale today for $280, Costco won't do a price adjustment for you because this sale is part of their holiday promo book and those items are limited to availability. So you'll have to buy a new one at the lower price and do a return with the previous $400 receipt. You can actually return the new unopened one you just bought using the old receipt.


Chase Freedom Card 5% Cash Back if used via Chase Pay connected to Samsung Pay:
If buying in-store and a) you have a Chase Freedom Card and b) you have Samsung Pay:
1) Activate the Q4 2019 bonus categories, which are a) department stores, b) PayPal, and c) Chase Pay
https://creditcards.chase.com/fre...cards/home
2) Connect your Freedom Card to Chase Pay
3) Connect Chase Pay to Samsung Pay
4) Connect your Freedom Card to Samsung Pay through Chase Pay. You can't just enter the card number directly into Samsung Pay.
5) Pay for your purchase using Samsung Pay. Be sure to select your Chase Freedom Card. You'll get 5% cash back.
kubavance
3 Posts
34 Reputation
You have clearly already checked out, and that's perfectly fine. I'm going to respond anyway to clear up what I consider to be some misconceptions regarding this $280 laptop. I'd hate for people to start second-guessing their purchase just because they read some negative comments.

I'm not going to make assumptions about how much you know about modern processors, so I'll just mention some basics. Ever since the invention of turbo boosting, pretty much all processors "throttle" under load. The CPU uses a complicated algorithm to determine which frequency each core should run at in any given moment. The algorithm takes into account power limits and temperature sensor data and the duration of heavy workloads, among other things.

Intel and to a lesser extent the device manufacturer can set power limits for the processor to make sure the processor can run safely in a given chassis. These are known as PL1 and PL2. The CPU can only run in PL2 for a limited time (we're talking seconds or minutes) before it has to throttle back to PL1 to maintain reasonable temperatures. From my very limited testing, it would appear that PL2 for this laptop is set at around 26W, and PL1 is around 18W. Remember, this is a 15W processor.

The new Dell XPS 13 2-in-1 has the Core i7 version of the same Ice Lake processor found in this HP, only its configured for 25W. This means that the Dell chassis has theoretically been designed to dissipate at least 10W more of heat. It's also an $1,800 laptop with 16GB of memory. It should have a huge advantage. According to notebookcheck's review (https://www.notebookcheck.net/Del...573.0.html), the Dell XPS 13 achieves a high score of ~830 the first several times you run Cinebench R15 before thermal soak sets in (meaning it gets capped to PL1), after which it scores about 660 consistently.

I just ran Cinebench R15 about 10 times in a row on my HP 14 and got about 580 consistently (first run was about 600). CPU power held steady at 18W and temperatures hovered around 75 degrees Celsius. That's not throttling--that's working as designed.

Are you really that disappointed that your $280 laptop (with a HUGE RAM disadvantage) only scores within 10-15% of an $1800 Dell?
SociableMusic247
43 Posts
23 Reputation
This one has g4 graphics and the 399$ one is a g1 - no upgrade can fix that.
120 $ can buy more than a 256 gb SSD and 4 gigs og RAM.
Also note that this has a better wifi module...

4,263 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Nov 18, 2019 02:01 AM
7,249 Posts
Joined Sep 2014
tacoreactorNov 18, 2019 02:01 AM
7,249 Posts
Quote from xtp :
You have to be careful with benchmarks, it could be locked into a slightly lower power state, and skew numbers dramatically, gotta do it several times.

Then you get to deal with the thermal issue.. Given how small this cooling solution is, Liquid metal seems almost necessary.

I'm still debating my unit, love h8 atm. Mainly the screen I'm not happy with.

Has anyone managed to push past CPU 25watt with cooling modification, or is that just the hard long power limit.
If you're putting the cpu under constant loads, it might be a good idea to get any basic cooling pad.
A single fan would be enough.
Mix that with some liquid metal, and get some results. Might void the warranty though to use it.
Nov 18, 2019 02:23 AM
283 Posts
Joined Jan 2008
littlemauiNov 18, 2019 02:23 AM
283 Posts
[quote="MattM8813;132003256"]I got 4235 passmark with Sabrent 1TB Rocket NVMe and 2 x Patriot Viper Steel DDR4 16GB 3000MHz installed:

Passmark Rating 4,235
CPU Mark 10,010
2D Graphics Mark 646
3D Graphics Mark 1,805
Memory Mark 2,822
Disk Mark 28,755

https://www.passmark.com/baseline...9838505988
Nov 18, 2019 02:25 AM
283 Posts
Joined Jan 2008
littlemauiNov 18, 2019 02:25 AM
283 Posts
Quote from fadegs :
Good results. Just saw this was with RAM and SSD upgrades.
My Results: https://www.passmark.com/baseline...9840235402
Nov 18, 2019 02:26 AM
122 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
clairvoyantxNov 18, 2019 02:26 AM
122 Posts
Quote from tacoreactor :
If you're putting the cpu under constant loads, it might be a good idea to get any basic cooling pad.
A single fan would be enough.
Mix that with some liquid metal, and get some results. Might void the warranty though to use it.
Quote from SpinControl :
Hmmm. Your passmark scores with 2400MHz are better than the one with 3000MHz RAM.
Interesting.
Quote from xtp :
You have to be careful with benchmarks, it could be locked into a slightly lower power state, and skew numbers dramatically, gotta do it several times.

Then you get to deal with the thermal issue.. Given how small this cooling solution is, Liquid metal seems almost necessary.

I'm still debating my unit, love h8 atm. Mainly the screen I'm not happy with.

Has anyone managed to push past CPU 25watt with cooling modification, or is that just the hard long power limit.
I actually have the kingston 2933 cas 17 ram installed and undervolted with throttle stop and can reach CPUmark of 11656 with memory mark 2810. However when thermally soaked and hitting PL1 after a few runs it is closer to 11200 and sometimes lower. Also, depending on the ram if the speed is only in set in xmp this laptop may default to a lower jedec profile like 2666, 2400 or even 2133

Changing the thermal paste will reduce throttling due to temperatures during the first 28 seconds @ full throttle PL2 (28-30W with 4 cores @ 3.3ghz) and temps can hit 95C until fans ramp up to full speed and temps decrease to 80C. After 28 seconds, it power limits and The cooler with fans at full speed can easily handle the 19W PL1 (4 cores @ 2.6ghz) with temps around 60C (workload dependent with a cpu stress test).

The PL limits are the similar with mixed workload like gaming but now cpu and cpu share the same power limit. So undervolting both can help decrease power usage and allow faster speed for cpu and/or gpu under sustained workloads.
Last edited by clairvoyantx November 17, 2019 at 06:41 PM.
Nov 18, 2019 02:43 AM
4,542 Posts
Joined Nov 2013
luckydog97Nov 18, 2019 02:43 AM
4,542 Posts
Quote from el31415 :
You have 90 days to return it...better deal will be by BF.
Yeah but Costco technically delivered what was advertised, and it seemed wrong to use it for 3 months when I know I'll return it.
Nov 18, 2019 02:43 AM
30 Posts
Joined Nov 2017
Toppgunn1Nov 18, 2019 02:43 AM
30 Posts
Does anyone know if USB-C can be used to for LAN - internet?

I have 1 gig internet that I would like to use a LAN line for because on wifi I only get like 200-250mbps...
Nov 18, 2019 02:44 AM
9,681 Posts
Joined Aug 2013
xtpNov 18, 2019 02:44 AM
9,681 Posts
Quote from clairvoyantx :
I actually have the kingston 2933 cas 17 ram installed and undervolted with throttle stop and can reach CPUmark of 11656 with memory mark 2810. However when thermally soaked and hitting PL1 after a few runs it is closer to 11200 and sometimes lower. Also, depending on the ram if the speed is only in set in xmp this laptop may default to a lower jedec profile like 2666, 2400 or even 2133

Changing the thermal paste will reduce throttling due to temperatures during the first 28 seconds @ full throttle PL2 (28-30W with 4 cores @ 3.3ghz) and temps can hit 95C until fans ramp up to full speed and temps decrease to 80C. After 28 seconds, it power limits and The cooler with fans at full speed can easily handle the 19W PL1 (4 cores @ 2.6ghz) with temps around 60C (workload dependent with a cpu stress test).

The PL limits are the similar with mixed workload like gaming but now cpu and cpu share the same power limit. So undervolting both can help decrease power usage and allow faster speed for cpu and/or gpu under sustained workloads.
Yea that's been my observed behavior as well. I was "HOPING" that it'd allow the full 40watt and just spin that fan at max speed.

Essentially this CPU has quite alot more power than is let-run by this configuration.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Nov 18, 2019 02:48 AM
224 Posts
Joined Oct 2008
jacktNov 18, 2019 02:48 AM
224 Posts
Quote from Toppgunn1 :
Does anyone know if USB-C can be used to for LAN - internet?

I have 1 gig internet that I would like to use a LAN line for because on wifi I only get like 200-250mbps...
Yes you can get a usb to gigabit ethernet dongle. You can use the 2 USB-A ports or the USB-C port. They all have enough throughput for gigabit ethernet.
Nov 18, 2019 02:53 AM
9,681 Posts
Joined Aug 2013
xtpNov 18, 2019 02:53 AM
9,681 Posts
Quote from jackt :
Yes you can get a usb to gigabit ethernet dongle. You can use the 2 USB-A ports or the USB-C port. They all have enough throughput for gigabit ethernet.
upgrading the wifi card might be money better spent. latest ac card + router can get something like 400Mbit. which is ~50MB/s , nothing you're gonna be able to do on this laptop will need more net bandwidth than that.
Nov 18, 2019 02:56 AM
509 Posts
Joined Jan 2017
stevexyzNov 18, 2019 02:56 AM
509 Posts
Just picked up one from local Costco this afternoon. The big label on one side says i3. The small label from the other side says i5. Turned it on and confirmed to be i5.

I think the small label is the actual HP manufacturer label while the big one was from Costco since the big one was stacked on top of another label. Also the big label has the Costco item number on it. So it must be the mislabeling from Costco.

Have not opened the back cover yet. But there's one thing I have in mind: battery charging. My old Samsung laptop and other manufacturers like Lenovo and Asus have a battery life extender feature that you can set to stop charging the battery when it reaches 80%. This will help prolong the battery life in the long run. I have seen many laptops that must be plugged in to turn on after only 3~4 years, while my 7 year old Samsung laptop can still hold a charge (about 4~5 hours normal use when unplugged) thanks to this feature.

I've googled a bit and found out that some HP laptop also have this feature in the bios called "Battery Care Function". But unfortunately this one does not. I've already updated the bios via Device Manager. But still no sign of this function. Does anyone how how to get it on this laptop?
Nov 18, 2019 03:04 AM
18 Posts
Joined Jun 2010
OoglyNov 18, 2019 03:04 AM
18 Posts
Just went to 2 Costco's in the SF Bay Area, they have 30+ each and all of them where i3's.
Nov 18, 2019 03:08 AM
509 Posts
Joined Jan 2017
stevexyzNov 18, 2019 03:08 AM
509 Posts
Quote from Oogly :
Just went to 2 Costco's in the SF Bay Area, they have 30+ each and all of them where i3's.
Did you take a look at the actual box? There are two labels on the two sides. The big one might say i3 while the small one says i5. The big label should be from Costco because it has the Costco item number on it.
Nov 18, 2019 03:10 AM
30 Posts
Joined Nov 2017
Toppgunn1Nov 18, 2019 03:10 AM
30 Posts
Quote from jackt :
Yes you can get a usb to gigabit ethernet dongle. You can use the 2 USB-A ports or the USB-C port. They all have enough throughput for gigabit ethernet.
Thank You!!!
Nov 18, 2019 03:39 AM
171 Posts
Joined Jan 2014
FPisFREENov 18, 2019 03:39 AM
171 Posts
Help. I upgraded the SSD to Micro Center's Inland Premium 512GB unit [microcenter.com] from the wiki.
Now when I boot the laptop with a Win10 bootable thumb drive, all I get is HP's dreaded "boot device not found... please install an operating system on your hard disk... hard disk - (3F0)". The first two warnings are normal for unformatted drives, but many web posts claim 3F0 means bad drive.

But wait there's more...
Puzzled as to why thumb drive not accessible, even after changing boot order, and using F9 boot device select mode (UEFI boot is only selectable option) and testing thumb drive boot from my desktop. It's literally behaving as if no USB drive attached, with exception to drive LED blinking on cold boot. I copied drivers to another thumb drive before the SSD swap, so I know the USB jack is OK. Do I guess correctly that the 3F0 overrides USB boot? Doesn't make sense, as this prevents booting with any diagnostic disks, and never saw a system behave that way.

Ran F2 diags, extended hard drive test with error: "long DST not available."
Other mitigation's: a) BIOS upgraded to F.07 b) disabled S Mode before replacing SSD c) disabled Secure Boot & removed all saved keys.

I'm out of ideas tonight. Perhaps the SSD is defective or incompatible? I know the specs matched the CPU.

Anything I missed? I replaced M.2 SSDs in the past, so not concerned about it being inserted wrong. Any help would be appreciated.

One more thing, should the BIOS display the SSD configuration somewhere? I didn't see the stock unit displayed either before the swap.

UPDATE: SSD is fine. Booted a Win10 release candidate DVD circa 2015 and let it install. The OS cold boots to login screen in 4 seconds on the NVMe drive!
I still cannot boot from any of my collection of Win desktop and server thumb drives (ISOs burned from both Rufus and Media Creation Tool).
Anyone else having issues booting from USB?
After I reinstall with 1903 I'll create a recovery drive and try booting again. Hope I don't need to exchange it... love this little laptop.

UPDATE 2:
All issues resolved thanks to a co-worker who also bought a 14-dq1033cl. Details below.

The laptop only supports FAT32 boot from USB drive with Safe Boot enabled. The Win10 installation image has a big WIM file under source folder which is greater than 4GB. So you have 2 options:
- split the WIM file with a windows command, or
- use Rufus v3.8 or newer to create the USB image, specify GPT partition, then disable Safe Boot in BIOS and clear SB keys.

I can now boot from the F9 menu (with Safe Boot disabled) after upgrading to latest version of Rufus and recreating the USB image -- which is to say the GPT image created with an older Rufus version also prevented the thumb drive from being recognized in the F9 boot list.
Last edited by FPisFREE November 18, 2019 at 09:50 AM.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Nov 18, 2019 04:16 AM
116 Posts
Joined Jul 2005
beatfuldaesNov 18, 2019 04:16 AM
116 Posts
Quote from Oogly :
Just went to 2 Costco's in the SF Bay Area, they have 30+ each and all of them where i3's.
Just picked one up this afternoon from the SF one on Harrison. The label says it's an i5.

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Popular Deals

Trending Deals