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Re: Laptop display problem

Posted: Fri Apr 13, 2018 11:03 am
by Charles L. Cotton
uthornsfan wrote:It might work on Windows 7. Just boot up the laptop with the external monitor connected. Give it enough time to full boot, then hit Windows + P. There are multiple options Extend, Duplicate, External only. So hit the P, 1/2/3 times and see if anything happens.

FYI, if you use Outlook for your email, you don't have to export the pst. Outlook by default stores all the info in a PST unless you are connected to an exchange server, but you wouldn't be worried about your email if you had Exchange. You just need to go to where your .pst is stored, should be here

Code: Select all

C:\users\username\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Outlook
Thanks. If I don't have to export a pst, then just using the hard drive will be the easiest day.

Thanks,
Chas.

Re: Laptop display problem

Posted: Sat Apr 14, 2018 8:27 am
by E.Marquez
Charles L. Cotton wrote:
uthornsfan wrote:It might work on Windows 7. Just boot up the laptop with the external monitor connected. Give it enough time to full boot, then hit Windows + P. There are multiple options Extend, Duplicate, External only. So hit the P, 1/2/3 times and see if anything happens.

FYI, if you use Outlook for your email, you don't have to export the pst. Outlook by default stores all the info in a PST unless you are connected to an exchange server, but you wouldn't be worried about your email if you had Exchange. You just need to go to where your .pst is stored, should be here

Code: Select all

C:\users\username\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Outlook
Thanks. If I don't have to export a pst, then just using the hard drive will be the easiest day.

Thanks,
Chas.
That's what I was trying to explain, its a basic file that can accessed and moved with ease.
Remove your old HD, put in enclosure. Plug into new computer, then using the new computer
Follow this process
https://www.screencast.com/t/ox7XXvSRDAX

Re: Laptop display problem

Posted: Sat Apr 14, 2018 5:43 pm
by Charles L. Cotton
E.Marquez wrote:
Charles L. Cotton wrote:
uthornsfan wrote:It might work on Windows 7. Just boot up the laptop with the external monitor connected. Give it enough time to full boot, then hit Windows + P. There are multiple options Extend, Duplicate, External only. So hit the P, 1/2/3 times and see if anything happens.

FYI, if you use Outlook for your email, you don't have to export the pst. Outlook by default stores all the info in a PST unless you are connected to an exchange server, but you wouldn't be worried about your email if you had Exchange. You just need to go to where your .pst is stored, should be here

Code: Select all

C:\users\username\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Outlook
Thanks. If I don't have to export a pst, then just using the hard drive will be the easiest day.

Thanks,
Chas.
That's what I was trying to explain, its a basic file that can accessed and moved with ease.
Remove your old HD, put in enclosure. Plug into new computer, then using the new computer
Follow this process
https://www.screencast.com/t/ox7XXvSRDAX
Thanks for the video!

Chas.

Re: Laptop display problem

Posted: Wed Apr 18, 2018 7:44 pm
by Charles L. Cotton
Everything is working fine now. I was able to use the hard drive as an external drive to copy the pst file to the new computer. I then imported it into the active profile on the new laptop. This way I got everything back without losing the few hundred emails I received on the new laptop.

I then put the hard drive back into the laptop with the damaged LCD screen, hooked my TV up as an external monitor and it booted to the TV fine. Unplugging the damaged LCD screen did result in the laptop booting to the external monitor. I've wanted a computer tied to the TV, so this works fine.

Thanks for the input guys.
Chas.