You might be able to solve a problem with a notebook that has an unstable system or a motherboard component by?
you can use the file shareprogram...-Alternatives to fixing (upgrading)•Return notebook to manufacturer or service center•Substitute external component for internal device•Replace the internal device
you can use the file shareprogram...-Alternatives to fixing (upgrading)•Return notebook to manufacturer or service center•Substitute external component for internal device•Replace the internal device
You probably have a problem on the graphics board or motherboard, unless there is a graphics driver issue. The machine will need to be diagnosed and repaired by a specialist.
It can be burned
It could be many things. For example it could mean a bad motherboard or a lose cable that connects the screen to the motherboard or the screen itself is damaged. You can narrow down your problem by connecting a desktop monitor cable to the VGA port now after you connect the monitor and you can see a picture it means that your motherboard is working and you may have a lose/damaged cable or a bad screen.
by blowing me
Could be bad LCD screen, defective video cable or bad motherboard. First, test the laptop with external monitor. If video on the external monitor is normal but it's bad on the laptop LCD, the problem is somewhere inside the laptop display panel (bad LCD, bad video cable, bad connection between cable/motherboard/LCD). If video on the external monitor is bad too, you have either software related problem or something is wrong with the motherboard. Try reinstalling Windows first, it might help.
This is not an uncommon problem with these ultrabooks. There are three potential culprits. the only way to determine which is the problem is to test each component. Its either the LCD cable to the screen, the LCD screen itself, or the video graphics on the motherboard, in which case the whole motherboard would need to be replaced. Be warned these laptops have an extremely intricate design and will be a nightmare to dissasemble and reassemble should you decide to do so.
You may not have hibernate enabled
assuming the older mother board has similar sockets and slots for your current devices parts (and your motherboard supports those devices) you should have no problem downgrading
You either have a power supply problem, or if the ports are coming straight off of the motherboard, which they normally are then you obviously have a motherboard problem. Part of it could have shorted out and the only thing you can really do is replace it.
You can assume the problem is with the processor, the BIOS, or the motherboard.