Clearing the TPM
Clearing the TPM
Hello,
Well Vista has done it. It has muffed up my TPM module and so I had to uninstall the Client Security Suite, and disable the TPM in BIOS just to get it to boot up. Is there any way of clearing the data in the TPM and start back at square one like it came out of the factory?
Thanks!
Well Vista has done it. It has muffed up my TPM module and so I had to uninstall the Client Security Suite, and disable the TPM in BIOS just to get it to boot up. Is there any way of clearing the data in the TPM and start back at square one like it came out of the factory?
Thanks!
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arthurcorell
- Freshman Member
- Posts: 70
- Joined: Thu Apr 27, 2006 1:14 pm
- Location: Henderson, NV
That did not work. I tried holding ESC until it turned on and then pressed F1 to get into BIOS, looked around in there, and nothing showed up in any of the menus. I then tried holding ESC while the laptop turned on, and continued to hold it while pressing F1 and getting into BIOS. Again, looked in every menu for a setting to clear the TPM, and found nothing.
Any other thoughts...?
Any other thoughts...?
In windows disk manager it shows the hidden partition as being there, but has 100% free space. When I push the blue ThinkVantage button during boot up, after having installed Vista (since i have the cd's now I can restore the hard drive to original factory state, including the hidden recovery partition, but once I install Vista it clears the entire partition) nothing happens. The only thing I can access during boot up is BIOS (F1), and the boot menu (F12).
When I installed Vista beta, it broke access to the "hidden partition", but did not erase it. I used the Rescue and Recovery - Recovery repair diskette to regain access to the "hidden partition". The problem is, that then broke Vista! If I had used Fixmbr or somesuch boot repair program, I probably could have fixed Vista, then all would have been right. In my case I decided to install Vista by a different method where it would not affect the "hidden partition" on my XP drive.
DKB
The TPM? I don't use it.
I removed my XP hard drive with the service partition on it and put my spare hard drive for Vista in the Ultrabay Slim 2nd hard drive adapter and used an external DVD/CD drive to install Vista from. After Vista was installed, I put the original XP drive back in. On boot up, if I press F12, I get a boot drive option menu. Choose HDD(0) and XP boots. Choose HDD(1) and Vista boots. If I do not press F12, then by default XP boots (the main hard drive). I am confident that if I swapped the drives, Vista would boot by default. Whichever drive boots is the C: drive and the other becomes the D: drive. By doing this, Vista could not install a boot manager onto my XP drive as it is wont to do. This is what messes up booting into Rescue and Recovery.
I removed my XP hard drive with the service partition on it and put my spare hard drive for Vista in the Ultrabay Slim 2nd hard drive adapter and used an external DVD/CD drive to install Vista from. After Vista was installed, I put the original XP drive back in. On boot up, if I press F12, I get a boot drive option menu. Choose HDD(0) and XP boots. Choose HDD(1) and Vista boots. If I do not press F12, then by default XP boots (the main hard drive). I am confident that if I swapped the drives, Vista would boot by default. Whichever drive boots is the C: drive and the other becomes the D: drive. By doing this, Vista could not install a boot manager onto my XP drive as it is wont to do. This is what messes up booting into Rescue and Recovery.
DKB
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Leikeze Ajnin
- Posts: 28
- Joined: Tue Jan 09, 2007 2:58 pm
- Location: Connecticut, USA
On my T-60, just entering the BIOS and going into the Security menu presents options for clearing fingerprint data and encryption keys from the security chip's memory. You might have to re-enable the chip for those options to be present - I haven't looked at what's available with the chip disabled as of yet.
- Tim Healey
What is the TPM? Acronym = ?
"If a star were a grain of salt, you could fit all the stars visible to the naked eye on a teaspoon, but all the stars in the universe would fill a ball eight miles wide." - A Briefer History of Time, Stephen Hawking & Leonard Mlodinow
Dec. 2010: Now thought to be over 11 miles wide!
Dec. 2010: Now thought to be over 11 miles wide!
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kf_man
- Freshman Member
- Posts: 119
- Joined: Tue Dec 12, 2006 10:44 pm
- Location: Rochester, NY
- Contact:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trusted_Platform_ModuleMuse wrote:What is the TPM? Acronym = ?
-Kyle Farnung
Lenovo T60 2613HKU: 14.1" SXGA+, C2D T7200, 2GB RAM (2x1GB), 128MB Radeon X1400, 120GB 5400RPM HD, DVD-Burner, IPW 3945, BT, XP Pro
Lenovo T60 2613HKU: 14.1" SXGA+, C2D T7200, 2GB RAM (2x1GB), 128MB Radeon X1400, 120GB 5400RPM HD, DVD-Burner, IPW 3945, BT, XP Pro
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