On 05/26/2017 10:48 AM, Tom Killian wrote:
> Some years ago I had an IBM ThinkPad that one day failed to boot, and
> every subsystem diagnostic that ran at power-up (keyboard, memory, disk
> controller, ...) reported a problem.  On a whim I put in a new clock
> battery and everything was fine.  Now any time a machine suddenly goes
> flakey, the clock battery is the first thing that gets replaced.

That's one of the standard things I do during my yearly maintenance of
machines (shut down, pull cards, clean contacts, vacuum out dust and
other detrius, replace BIOS batteries, replace fans, put it all back
together, then go howl at a full moon and hope they boot up again).

> 
> On Fri, May 26, 2017 at 21:22:17 +0930,Tim wrote:
> 
>     On Thu, 2017-05-25 at 12:47 -0700, Rick Stevens wrote:
>     > Otherwise, with a weak battery the BIOS will usually revert to default
>     > settings which are generally considered conservative and "safe".
> 
>     I'm not so sure that's the case.  In many PCs, the BIOS clock, BIOS
>     memory, and perhaps other BIOS hardware, are powered solely by the
>     battery (even when the computer is running off mains power).  So, with
>     failing power you could have all manner of random things happen.
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- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigital    ri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2        ICQ: 226437340           Yahoo: origrps2 -
-                                                                    -
- ...Had this been an actual emergency, we would have fled in terror -
-                      and you'd be on your own, pal!                -
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