Is it possible to install windows on a laptop with a broken screen using hdmi cable only












0














I have an asus laptop, the screen is broken but was working fine connected to an external monitor via hdmi cable.



It was slow so i decided to reset the pc, since it restarted I can't complete the installation procedure because the display won't show on the monitor (via hdmi).



Is it possible to be able to view it someway via hdmi (hence I don't have a vga cord) so I can complete the installation?










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  • does the laptop have VGA out?
    – Keltari
    Dec 7 '18 at 23:10










  • Yes, well a standard vga port
    – coders
    Dec 7 '18 at 23:29
















0














I have an asus laptop, the screen is broken but was working fine connected to an external monitor via hdmi cable.



It was slow so i decided to reset the pc, since it restarted I can't complete the installation procedure because the display won't show on the monitor (via hdmi).



Is it possible to be able to view it someway via hdmi (hence I don't have a vga cord) so I can complete the installation?










share|improve this question






















  • does the laptop have VGA out?
    – Keltari
    Dec 7 '18 at 23:10










  • Yes, well a standard vga port
    – coders
    Dec 7 '18 at 23:29














0












0








0







I have an asus laptop, the screen is broken but was working fine connected to an external monitor via hdmi cable.



It was slow so i decided to reset the pc, since it restarted I can't complete the installation procedure because the display won't show on the monitor (via hdmi).



Is it possible to be able to view it someway via hdmi (hence I don't have a vga cord) so I can complete the installation?










share|improve this question













I have an asus laptop, the screen is broken but was working fine connected to an external monitor via hdmi cable.



It was slow so i decided to reset the pc, since it restarted I can't complete the installation procedure because the display won't show on the monitor (via hdmi).



Is it possible to be able to view it someway via hdmi (hence I don't have a vga cord) so I can complete the installation?







installation hdmi external-display






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share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 7 '18 at 23:06









coders

123




123












  • does the laptop have VGA out?
    – Keltari
    Dec 7 '18 at 23:10










  • Yes, well a standard vga port
    – coders
    Dec 7 '18 at 23:29


















  • does the laptop have VGA out?
    – Keltari
    Dec 7 '18 at 23:10










  • Yes, well a standard vga port
    – coders
    Dec 7 '18 at 23:29
















does the laptop have VGA out?
– Keltari
Dec 7 '18 at 23:10




does the laptop have VGA out?
– Keltari
Dec 7 '18 at 23:10












Yes, well a standard vga port
– coders
Dec 7 '18 at 23:29




Yes, well a standard vga port
– coders
Dec 7 '18 at 23:29










1 Answer
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I had a similar problem with a laptop and what I found is that it's possible with some laptops, and it's not with others. I ended up having to replace the screen on mine before I could re-install windows on it.



The issue is that some video card configurations in laptops don't enable HDMI output by default and need either the OS or the BIOS to enable them. My laptop wouldn't enable it with just the BIOS, and the Windows installer didn't enable it either. I could, on the other hand, install Linux on the machine using the external monitor.



A technique that might work for you is to plug in a USB mouse and keyboard and close the lid of the computer. If your laptop supports it, this can make the BIOS disable the laptop's KVM and use HDMI out instead. For details, see: http://www.tomsguide.com/faq/id-3694215/install-windows-laptop-broken-screen.html



There's another way that I thought about but never actually tried, so take this with a grain of salt: use bootable media with a boot loader that does enable the HDMI out on your machine (try GRUB, LILO, Syslinux, etc., find one that works for you), set it up to load your Windows installation media and run the Win install after the external monitor is working. This might work, or it might turn on HDMI out while the boot loader is active and turn it back off once the Win installation media is loaded.






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    2














    I had a similar problem with a laptop and what I found is that it's possible with some laptops, and it's not with others. I ended up having to replace the screen on mine before I could re-install windows on it.



    The issue is that some video card configurations in laptops don't enable HDMI output by default and need either the OS or the BIOS to enable them. My laptop wouldn't enable it with just the BIOS, and the Windows installer didn't enable it either. I could, on the other hand, install Linux on the machine using the external monitor.



    A technique that might work for you is to plug in a USB mouse and keyboard and close the lid of the computer. If your laptop supports it, this can make the BIOS disable the laptop's KVM and use HDMI out instead. For details, see: http://www.tomsguide.com/faq/id-3694215/install-windows-laptop-broken-screen.html



    There's another way that I thought about but never actually tried, so take this with a grain of salt: use bootable media with a boot loader that does enable the HDMI out on your machine (try GRUB, LILO, Syslinux, etc., find one that works for you), set it up to load your Windows installation media and run the Win install after the external monitor is working. This might work, or it might turn on HDMI out while the boot loader is active and turn it back off once the Win installation media is loaded.






    share|improve this answer


























      2














      I had a similar problem with a laptop and what I found is that it's possible with some laptops, and it's not with others. I ended up having to replace the screen on mine before I could re-install windows on it.



      The issue is that some video card configurations in laptops don't enable HDMI output by default and need either the OS or the BIOS to enable them. My laptop wouldn't enable it with just the BIOS, and the Windows installer didn't enable it either. I could, on the other hand, install Linux on the machine using the external monitor.



      A technique that might work for you is to plug in a USB mouse and keyboard and close the lid of the computer. If your laptop supports it, this can make the BIOS disable the laptop's KVM and use HDMI out instead. For details, see: http://www.tomsguide.com/faq/id-3694215/install-windows-laptop-broken-screen.html



      There's another way that I thought about but never actually tried, so take this with a grain of salt: use bootable media with a boot loader that does enable the HDMI out on your machine (try GRUB, LILO, Syslinux, etc., find one that works for you), set it up to load your Windows installation media and run the Win install after the external monitor is working. This might work, or it might turn on HDMI out while the boot loader is active and turn it back off once the Win installation media is loaded.






      share|improve this answer
























        2












        2








        2






        I had a similar problem with a laptop and what I found is that it's possible with some laptops, and it's not with others. I ended up having to replace the screen on mine before I could re-install windows on it.



        The issue is that some video card configurations in laptops don't enable HDMI output by default and need either the OS or the BIOS to enable them. My laptop wouldn't enable it with just the BIOS, and the Windows installer didn't enable it either. I could, on the other hand, install Linux on the machine using the external monitor.



        A technique that might work for you is to plug in a USB mouse and keyboard and close the lid of the computer. If your laptop supports it, this can make the BIOS disable the laptop's KVM and use HDMI out instead. For details, see: http://www.tomsguide.com/faq/id-3694215/install-windows-laptop-broken-screen.html



        There's another way that I thought about but never actually tried, so take this with a grain of salt: use bootable media with a boot loader that does enable the HDMI out on your machine (try GRUB, LILO, Syslinux, etc., find one that works for you), set it up to load your Windows installation media and run the Win install after the external monitor is working. This might work, or it might turn on HDMI out while the boot loader is active and turn it back off once the Win installation media is loaded.






        share|improve this answer












        I had a similar problem with a laptop and what I found is that it's possible with some laptops, and it's not with others. I ended up having to replace the screen on mine before I could re-install windows on it.



        The issue is that some video card configurations in laptops don't enable HDMI output by default and need either the OS or the BIOS to enable them. My laptop wouldn't enable it with just the BIOS, and the Windows installer didn't enable it either. I could, on the other hand, install Linux on the machine using the external monitor.



        A technique that might work for you is to plug in a USB mouse and keyboard and close the lid of the computer. If your laptop supports it, this can make the BIOS disable the laptop's KVM and use HDMI out instead. For details, see: http://www.tomsguide.com/faq/id-3694215/install-windows-laptop-broken-screen.html



        There's another way that I thought about but never actually tried, so take this with a grain of salt: use bootable media with a boot loader that does enable the HDMI out on your machine (try GRUB, LILO, Syslinux, etc., find one that works for you), set it up to load your Windows installation media and run the Win install after the external monitor is working. This might work, or it might turn on HDMI out while the boot loader is active and turn it back off once the Win installation media is loaded.







        share|improve this answer












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        answered Dec 7 '18 at 23:58









        W. Wight

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