I had some free time this afternoon, so I decided to try and play around with FreeBSD. I was operating under the assumption that I may have had two different nvidia drivers installed at the same time. All I could get was a black screen with a mouse cursor, but I seemed to be making progress with it.
However that, I tried to boot into Kubuntu, and it froze without loading KDE. Hmmm... Well after that I rebooted and picked Windows 10 at the Grub menu. Windows 10 also failed to boot, when it had been working fine just a little while ago.
To make a long story short, it couldn't boot from an Ubuntu live USB, but it could boot into a thumb drive containing Windows PE. Very strange. However, Windows PE couldn't see my network card (when usually it can) and there was a lot of gibberish listed under device manager. Hmmm
After that I opened up the case and tried reseating the video card, ram, and all of the sata cables. Unfortunately this made no difference, and I'm guessing that something must have happened to either my motherboard or video card during my reckless monkeying around with video drivers.
I'm not blaming FreeBSD, or anyone else. All hardware eventually breaks or wears out, and now my trusty PC has finally met its end.
Fortunately I still have an old HP laptop that is about seven or eight years old, but I'm going to need to keep that intact in order to deal with my wife's appointment. I guess that the moral of the story is, if you're on a tight budget, then don't put your hardware at risk by senselessly playing with it. Oh well. Ciao, it was fun while it lasted.
However that, I tried to boot into Kubuntu, and it froze without loading KDE. Hmmm... Well after that I rebooted and picked Windows 10 at the Grub menu. Windows 10 also failed to boot, when it had been working fine just a little while ago.
To make a long story short, it couldn't boot from an Ubuntu live USB, but it could boot into a thumb drive containing Windows PE. Very strange. However, Windows PE couldn't see my network card (when usually it can) and there was a lot of gibberish listed under device manager. Hmmm
After that I opened up the case and tried reseating the video card, ram, and all of the sata cables. Unfortunately this made no difference, and I'm guessing that something must have happened to either my motherboard or video card during my reckless monkeying around with video drivers.
I'm not blaming FreeBSD, or anyone else. All hardware eventually breaks or wears out, and now my trusty PC has finally met its end.
Fortunately I still have an old HP laptop that is about seven or eight years old, but I'm going to need to keep that intact in order to deal with my wife's appointment. I guess that the moral of the story is, if you're on a tight budget, then don't put your hardware at risk by senselessly playing with it. Oh well. Ciao, it was fun while it lasted.