I was helping my friend install Mint on his laptop, it all went well and the installation finished, but the driver for the wi-fi module wouldn’t turn on properly, or something. I assumed this was due to secure boot messing with the drivers, so I tried to disable it in the BIOS (it’s an older laptop, no UEFI). But I have spent the last 3 hours trying and failing to open BIOS, and even GRUB. Nothing I try seems to work.
I tried all the function keys, as well as delete, escape, and enter, and the only thing I found is that F12 opens a boot options menu.
I tried holding and mashing shift throughout the boot procedure to get to GRUB.
I tried using the novo button (it’s a Lenovo laptop) which did open a new menu allowing me to select a “BIOS options” button, but it just rebooted after showing me a few rolling lines of text.
I tried plugging in the installation media I used before, which does take me to it’s GRUB, but choosing the UEFI options option there just causes a reboot.
I tried disconnecting the battery and the CMOS battery and waiting for 30 seconds in hopes of disabling fast boot, which didn’t work.
I edited GRUB config files to change the timeout to 10 and the type away from hidden, which didn’t do anything.
I disconnected the disk in hopes of it defaulting to the BIOS, which works for some laptops.
No option worked. I just cannot access BIOS or GRUB. I really don’t know where to go next, and could use some help.
I don’t have any problem getting the installation media to work, changing the boot device is one of the only meta-OS things I can do right now.
Just thinking aloud here…
Can you boot the install media when the laptop storage is installed?
If so, you can use gparted from the install media to clean the storage device and start from scratch. That might help.
You should be able to tell what mode to install the os in from the boot mode of the install media.