I have an HP DV7T-2000 that has the 64-bit versions of Windows 7 Home Premium, Fedora 16, Ubuntu 11.10 and FreeBSD 9.0.
It has two, 250GB SATA disks. The first has all the operating systems and the second is NTFS formatted with just "data".
The first drive has an MBR partition scheme laid out as so:
Primary Partition
~78GB Windows ntfs
Extended Partitions
~37GB Fedora 16 ext4
~37GB Ubuntu 11.10 ext4
~4GB linux swap
Primary Partition
~74GB FreeBSD ufs
~4GB freebsd-swap
Windows 7 was installed first, then Fedora, then Ubuntu. Ubuntu installed GRUB2 as the boot loader and that's been fine.
FreeBSD was installed last and everything went without a problem until the reboot. My laptop just sits at the BIOS screen. I can't even get into the BIOS. I've removed the power, battery, and CMOS battery and still can't get into the BIOS.
Any ideas why it won't boot past the BIOS?
It has two, 250GB SATA disks. The first has all the operating systems and the second is NTFS formatted with just "data".
The first drive has an MBR partition scheme laid out as so:
Primary Partition
~78GB Windows ntfs
Extended Partitions
~37GB Fedora 16 ext4
~37GB Ubuntu 11.10 ext4
~4GB linux swap
Primary Partition
~74GB FreeBSD ufs
~4GB freebsd-swap
Windows 7 was installed first, then Fedora, then Ubuntu. Ubuntu installed GRUB2 as the boot loader and that's been fine.
FreeBSD was installed last and everything went without a problem until the reboot. My laptop just sits at the BIOS screen. I can't even get into the BIOS. I've removed the power, battery, and CMOS battery and still can't get into the BIOS.
Any ideas why it won't boot past the BIOS?