I have upgraded to Windows 10 on July 29. All is going well. There is one major problem that when I starts my Laptop after Windows boot logo screen goes black for 2-3 mins and then comes lock screen.
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Please resolve this issue.Specs of my laptop areHP Pavilion dv6 6120se Entertainment PCProcessor: Core i7 @2.20 GHzRam: 8 GBHDD: 500 GBGraphics Card: Intel(R) HD Graphics 3000AMD Radeon HD 7400M SeriesHi!I have the same issue here. The problem is not the Windows 10, it is AMD Radeon driver. Update your AMD Radeon HD 7400M driver. Check whether it is working or not. It may work with the time.
They will probably fix the issue with updates. Check the AMD Radeondriver updates frequently and update the driver ASAP.Good luck! Hi,I upgraded my Dell E6520 (Marked as incompatible with windows 10 on dell website.) from windows 7 pro to Windows 10 pro and I had the same exact issue.My Video Card is same as yours (Intel(R) HD Graphics 3000). I battled almost four hours to come to a correct solution. I noticed that my HP computer which was running on Windows 8.1 did not get the long lasting black screen before the login after upgradeto windows 10. Therefore I guessed that upgrading from windows 8 is the best solution as it is a close brother of windows 10.I went to Dell support and downloaded the graphic drivers compatible with windows 8 - For Dell E6520 users:installing I received a pop up message saying that my computer have the newer drivers and if I am willing to overwrite it. I choose OK to overwrite the existing drivers.After I rebooted my computer, the black screen was just a blink of an eye.You may need to go to HP support and download the graphic card drivers for Windows 8.
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It may resolve your issue. Hi,I upgraded my Dell E6520 (Marked as incompatible with windows 10 on dell website.) from windows 7 pro to Windows 10 pro and I had the same exact issue.My Video Card is same as yours (Intel(R) HD Graphics 3000).
I battled almost four hours to come to a correct solution. I noticed that my HP computer which was running on Windows 8.1 did not get the long lasting black screen before the login after upgradeto windows 10. Therefore I guessed that upgrading from windows 8 is the best solution as it is a close brother of windows 10.I went to Dell support and downloaded the graphic drivers compatible with windows 8 - For Dell E6520 users:installing I received a pop up message saying that my computer have the newer drivers and if I am willing to overwrite it. I choose OK to overwrite the existing drivers.After I rebooted my computer, the black screen was just a blink of an eye.You may need to go to HP support and download the graphic card drivers for Windows 8. It may resolve your issue.I would like to know whether you have a dedicated VGA card or not?
Yes, I do have a Video Graphics Adapter(VGA) card.Update to my post from yesterday after multiple tests.I also noticed that the black screen seems to stay a bit longer when you are doing a restart( startPowerRestart).After I changed my drivers, the black screen shows only 2 to 3 seconds when I do a fresh start(by pressing the power button to start), however when I do a restart( startPowerRestart) the black screen waiting time increases between 8 to 10 seconds (I havetested this several time).Nevertheless it does not stay on the black screen forever. Yes, I do have a Video Graphics Adapter(VGA) card.Update to my post from yesterday after multiple tests.I also noticed that the black screen seems to stay a bit longer when you are doing a restart( startPowerRestart).After I changed my drivers, the black screen shows only 2 to 3 seconds when I do a fresh start(by pressing the power button to start), however when I do a restart( startPowerRestart) the black screen waiting time increases between 8 to 10 seconds (I havetested this several time).Nevertheless it does not stay on the black screen forever.I mean beside the Intel(R) Graphics? I have upgraded to Windows 10 on July 29. All is going well. There is one major problem that when I starts my Laptop after Windows boot logo screen goes black for 2-3 mins and then comes lock screen. Please resolve this issue.Specs of my laptop areHP Pavilion dv6 6120se Entertainment PCProcessor: Core i7 @2.20 GHzRam: 8 GBHDD: 500 GBGraphics Card: Intel(R) HD Graphics 3000AMD Radeon HD 7400M SeriesTemporary solution for the issue.
Please follow the steps.Step 1Go to the registry by typing 'regedit' in windows search.Step 2Go to the 'Edit' tab and click on 'Find'.Step 3In the text box type in 'EnableULPS' and then press Find.Step 4You should see 'EnableULPS'. Double click on it.Step 5Change the value from '1' to '0'Step 6Restart your computer.RecapULPS should now be disabled. Although you can opt to disable it in Afterburner and Catalyst Control Center, it often gets turned back on after an update and so doing this is more efficient.Note: If you want to turn ULPS back on, simply change the value back to '1'.
Don't know what this setting is or what it did but it totally fixed the issue. Just upgraded my GFs laptop the other day and she was complaining about it taking too long to boot. Well it is now 3am in the morning and after countless 'fixes' and updatesand forums this finally did the trick!Thank you.You are welcome!Here is the answer for your question.
ULPS mean Ultra Low Power State.If you have two AMD card's in crossfire, it probably has ULPS enabled. ULPS disables the second GPU when not in use. This is alright but sometimes it causes issues in overclocking and/or playing certain games. It can also cause other problems do for troubleshootingpurposes, it is recommended to disable ULPS.AMD will fix the issue with times. Update your graphic drivers recently and check whether black screen issue solved or not.
I got a similar problem, this is my own fix:Configuration: HP probook 4730, Video combo AMD Radeon 7400M / Intel HD graphics, SSDBoot time was less than 30 seconds on win7 x64, but close to 3 minutes after migrating to Win10It took me 2 days to locate and fix this problem. And it was located in the drivers for the AMD Radeon 7400M.How I fixed it:- Go to HP support & download and loaded the latest available version, which was 2 years old and for Win 8.1 x64 (version 13.xx in place of version 15.xx).- From Control Panel/Device list, suppress the AMD Radeon 7400M device- From Control panel/Programs, uninstall the AMD Catalyst software & drivers- Now install the downloaded HP version (for win8.1 )- Reboot - Boot was ok, no delay.
After reboot, a Microsoft generic driver is installed, then it is replaced by the previously installed HP one.- Reboot again,- Problem seems to be fixed.
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The Slow Boot up issue on Windows 10 after installing updates, commonly is caused because of an outdated or incompatible program or device driver. In other cases the issue is caused because some critical updates may contain bugs that they haven't fixed yet from Microsoft.In this tutorial you 'll find instructions to resolve the Slow boot up issue on Windows 10 OS after installing a critical update. How to FIX Windows Slow Boot Problem. Perform a Clean boot1. Simultaneously press the Windows + R keys to open the ' Run' command box.2. In run command box, type msconfig press Enter to open the System Configuration utility.
Then select the Startup tab and click Open Task Manager.6. Select one by one all startup items and click Disable.7. Finally click OK and restart your computer.8. Check if the boot up time is faster. If it is okay, then open the System Configuration (msconfig) utility again and enable one by one the disabled services and programs and restart your system, until you find out which one cause Windows 10 to boot slow.Step 2. Disable Fast Startup.1. At the search box type control panel and press Enter.2.
Change the View B y (at the up right) to Small icons and then click Power Options. In device manager, expand the Display Controllers.4. Right click on the installed Display Adapter and select Uninstall device.5. At the warning window, check first the ' Delete the driver software for this device' checkbox and click Uninstall.6.
Restart your computer.7. After restart, proceed and reinstall the latest driver software for your VGA device from manufacturer's support site. Note: In some occasions, the installation of an oldest version of the VGA driver, can fix the slow Windows 10 boot up issue.Step 4. Disable Ultra Low Power State (ULPS) on AMD Graphics AdapterULPS is a sleep state that lowers the frequencies and voltages of non-primary cards in an attempt to save power, but the downside of ULPS is that is can cause your system to startup slow if you 're using an AMD graphics Adapter. To disable ULPS:1. Simultaneously press the Windows + R keys to open the ' Run' command box.2. In run command box, type regedit press Enter to open the Registry Editor.3.
From Edit menu click Find.4. In search box type EnableULPS and press Find Next.5.
Double click at the ' EnableULPS' highlighted value and modify the value data from 1 to 0. Click OK when done.6. By pressing the F3 key, find the rest ' EnableULPS' values and change the value data from 1 to 0.7. When done, close registry editor and restart your computer.Additional help: If after restart you still experience the slow boot up issue and you have a laptop with two graphics adapters (e.g. Intel & AMD), then open Device Manger and disable the second adapter. right click on the 2nd adapter (e.g. AMD) and choose Disable device.
Then reboot.Other Solutions to fix the Slow Boot Up problem on Windows 10.1. Uninstall and reinstall the latest version of your Antivirus/Security program.2.
Reset Windows 10 from Settings - Update and security – Recovery. During the recovery process you 'll be asked to keep or not your personal files.4.
Backup your files to another storage media and then perform a, by using the.That's it! Let me know if this guide has helped you by leaving your comment about your experience. Please like and share this guide to help others.
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