Broken PC screen: How to share screen in safe mode?
brucine Posted messages 24384 Registration date Status Membre Last intervention -
Hello, I have an HP Pavilion 360 but the screen is broken. Since then, I have been using it on my TV via HDMI. Yesterday, I installed a software and the computer restarted, and now it doesn't turn back on the TV screen. I have the impression that it is in safe mode or BIOS, but I can't see anything on my TV screen because it no longer connects. Is there a way to connect my broken PC to another computer? Or, is there a shortcut to operate the computer despite the black screen to restart it?
Thank you in advance for your help.
7 réponses
Hello,
While waiting for a response from one of the "hardware" specialists at CCM. What you call screen sharing is actually display extending, which works either through a menu (invisible in its current state) or by toggling the appropriate function key.
However, a PC does not enter safe mode (repair mode) unless it's activated by pressing a function key during startup (to my knowledge).
On my Asus, it’s the F8 key, in any case the key that has a double screen icon. By pressing it several times, if the graphics card is functioning properly (especially if the driver has not been disabled by an update), you should be able to toggle through one of the positions (internal screen only, external screen only, external + internal screen) and restore the display.
I believe that in the drivers of certain graphics cards, there is a television option, but it should only concern the resolution settings.
Thank you for your response, but as I mentioned, I haven't activated safe mode or BIOS. I wanted to install AMD Software and the software asked me to restart the PC. When I clicked okay, the computer restarted but it no longer displayed on my TV. So, I'm looking for a way to get a visual back so that my PC displays again on my TV.
Thank you.
Yes yes, but still nothing. Is it possible to duplicate the screen from another PC and set my PC as the main screen so that it displays on the second one?
No, I don't think so.
How do you proceed?
1- Unplug your phone from your TV
2- Turn off your phone by pressing and holding the power button
3- Turn your phone back on without connecting it to the TV
4- Connect your HDMI cable to the TV and the phone
5- Press the button to switch to the external screen.
What happens? Does the TV recognize a connection?
@+
There is no video input on current laptops (there used to be in YUV). It is possible to take remote control (TeamViewer, AnyDesk) but it's better if both PCs are functioning to consider this.
I think it's best to avoid going in all directions. You probably had an imperative reason to test this AMD driver, but if it doesn't work for your version of Windows or on your graphics chipset, it should have been tested on a fully functioning machine.
In my opinion, but this is just an opinion, a restoration to a previous state should be done, or even a factory reset (for the latter, after extracting the hard drive to back up data and at the cost of reinstalling all software and game profiles except for saves on publishers' websites).
Last point, it is universally recommended not to change drivers when everything is working, even if we expect a hypothetical improvement in performance.
If I stick to the comments I've read regarding my problem, it seems impossible to project your PC screen in safe mode. Or at least, the help you provided didn’t help me much.
I tried something: Noticing that safe mode only displays with the previous screen, and that if your screen is broken, you won’t be able to see anything, I took apart my PC. I disconnected all the cables connecting the screen to the keyboard and restarted the PC. To my surprise, it automatically connected to the TV. From there, I was able to exit safe mode.
PS: Among these cables, there are two that are used for the Wi-Fi connection, so you’ll need to reconnect those later. Just disconnect the cable that brings light to the screen.
Thanks again and I hope to help others who might have the same issue as me.
Hello,
For the record (assuming of course that the appropriate screen settings are made in Windows), safe mode does not load drivers by definition, and does so only successively, so it will only load the one necessary for multi-display when it reads it.
This driver is not loaded until the Windows interface is launched, which is of course the case if there is a crash, but also for example during the restart of a Windows update: during the installation, there is only display on the default screen.
What you did, which essentially makes the external device considered as the default one, "resolves" the question, but does not change anything about the impossibility I just mentioned.