2017-11-25, 07:20
then just go to LibreELEC's site, download their USB creator utility, run it, create the USB media, boot the Chromebox with it, and install
(2017-12-10, 21:01)Boulder Wrote: I ran into an interesting problem while trying to revert my HP Chromebox back to the original state to then just install a basic LibreELEC setup on it with the script. I know that I could do it without going back to the very beginning but I wanted to test it as I'm selling my other CB soon, and I plan to sell it in its original state.that's a generic error generated by the firmware when it can't validate that a genuine HP power supply is being used (something only the HP box does). What backup did you restore -- a backup generated by the script when you flashed the UEFI firmware originally, or one provided by the script at the time of restore?
The box had the latest UEFI firmware version and Win10 installed. I proceeded by restoring the stock firmware which went fine. Then I rebooted to recover ChromeOS, but an error message appears:
"The connected power supply does not have enough power to run this device. Blahblahblah.."
Well, the box has worked fine with the original HP 19,5V/3,33A/65W power supply on Win10 and also had no issues when it ran Chrome OS while I upgraded the firmware with the script.
Is there anything that I could do but buy a new power supply?
(2017-12-10, 21:28)Matt Devo Wrote:That's an interesting check, it's a surprise a simple Google search didn't bring up any results explaining the issue.(2017-12-10, 21:01)Boulder Wrote: I ran into an interesting problem while trying to revert my HP Chromebox back to the original state to then just install a basic LibreELEC setup on it with the script. I know that I could do it without going back to the very beginning but I wanted to test it as I'm selling my other CB soon, and I plan to sell it in its original state.that's a generic error generated by the firmware when it can't validate that a genuine HP power supply is being used (something only the HP box does). What backup did you restore -- a backup generated by the script when you flashed the UEFI firmware originally, or one provided by the script at the time of restore?
The box had the latest UEFI firmware version and Win10 installed. I proceeded by restoring the stock firmware which went fine. Then I rebooted to recover ChromeOS, but an error message appears:
"The connected power supply does not have enough power to run this device. Blahblahblah.."
Well, the box has worked fine with the original HP 19,5V/3,33A/65W power supply on Win10 and also had no issues when it ran Chrome OS while I upgraded the firmware with the script.
Is there anything that I could do but buy a new power supply?
(2017-12-10, 21:43)Boulder Wrote: That's an interesting check, it's a surprise a simple Google search didn't bring up any results explaining the issue.
I restored the backup generated by the script when I flashed the UEFI firmware.
(2017-12-11, 17:52)Boulder Wrote: Nope, not working. It gives the same error even when the reset button is held down when powering the device on.unfortunately I don't have a good answer then. If it is really a PSU issue, then replacing it should help, but I suspect that the firmware is just confused somehow, and I don't have a good suggestion on how to reset it.
(2017-12-12, 00:10)Matt Devo Wrote:(2017-12-11, 17:52)Boulder Wrote: Nope, not working. It gives the same error even when the reset button is held down when powering the device on.unfortunately I don't have a good answer then. If it is really a PSU issue, then replacing it should help, but I suspect that the firmware is just confused somehow, and I don't have a good suggestion on how to reset it.
(2017-12-15, 22:24)Boulder Wrote: Forgot to come here to tell that I was able to resolve the situation. I did buy a new power supply and tested it to work OK. For some reason, I started looking at the plugs of the two PSUs and soon noticed that the "broken" PSU just had a bent pin in the center of the plug. I managed to straighten it and fortunately, it works I don't know why they have chosen such a vulnerable thing as the ASUS doesn't seem to have one.
(2017-12-20, 06:26)digitalgimpus Wrote: So looking to update the firmware for some of the new stuff like the boot screen. I tried running a few live distro's, but keep running into memory issues. IIRC it's only 2GB.unfortunately "memory issues" isn't diagnostically actionable, so hard to recommend what to use without knowing what you already tried and what exactly the issue was.
So what OS is recommended for running the firmware-util script? Anyone do this before and have a recommendation?
Thanks!