Set the timing to boot? Use CMOS

  
                

If someone asks you how your computer is turned on? The answer is nothing more than: “Directly press the power switch button on the computer case and you won’t get it”. This is of course the easiest way. However, there are still many ways to open the computer. The following is a small series to show you how to use the CMOS SETUP program to achieve regular booting. Is it curious? Then hurry and experience it.

First enter & ldquo; CMOS SETUP & rdquo; program (most motherboards are pressed when the computer is started to press DEL); then move the light bar to the "Power Management Setup" option, press Enter to enter its submenu; then "Resume by Alarm" The item is set to “Enabled”, and the monthly boot date is set in the "Date (of Month) Alarm" item (0 means daily, 1 means 1st of every month, 2 means 2nd of every month, …… ), set the boot time in the “Time(hh:mm:ss)Alarm” option; save the settings and restart, when the computer is turned off, your computer will start automatically at the time you specify.

Note:

1. The computer motherboard must have the “Resume by Alarm” function to achieve regular power-on;

2. To achieve regular power-on, you must cancel the boot password. Function;

3. The most critical point is to power on the host.

Set the timed boot in the system BIOS SETUP, the motherboard of each computer is not the same, my P4P800 motherboard is set up like this:

System restart, press DEL key to enter BIOS SETUP UTILITY- >POWER->APM Configuration

Power On By RTC Alarm [Enabled]

RTC Alarm Date (date)___[Every Day (daily), [01-31 (day) ] (optional)

RTC Alarm Hour (hours)___[00-23]

RTC Alarm Minute (minutes)_[00-59]

RTC Alarm Second (seconds) ___[00-59]

Step 1 Enter the BIOS of the motherboard. In the “Power Management Setup”, there is a “Resume By Alarm” option. This option can be used to set the system. Power on every day or on a fixed date. It has only two options, Enabled and Disabled. After selecting Enabled, the following Date (of month) and Resume Time (hh:mm:ss) items can be set.

Step 2Data (of month) indicates the system boot date. If you select 0, it means booting every day.

If you choose a number between 1 and 31, it means that you have a fixed day of the month.

Step 3Resume Time (hh:mm:ss) indicates the system boot time. For example, if we set the Date (of month) to 0 and the Resume Time (hh:mm:ss) to 07:00:00, then the computer will start automatically at 7:00 every morning.

The first trick: regular boot Now most people's computers can support the regular boot function. For example, the author goes to work at 8:30 every day. After setting the time to start at 8:30 every day, the computer will be automatically turned on as soon as the time of work is reached. Oh, is this convenient?

Implementation conditions: First confirm that the power supply you are using is ATX power supply, and then check whether there is “Resume by Alarm” in the CMOS settings, “RTC Alarm Resume” Or a similar option (different motherboards, this option may differ from the settings).

Implementation steps: Press the “Del” button to enter the CMOS settings after the power-on self-test. In the main menu, go to the “Power Management Setup” menu and set the “Resume by Alarm” option to “Enabled". At this time, the following “Date(of Month) Alarm” sub-options and “Time(hh:mm:ss) Alarm” sub-options will be activated to be highlighted, that is, the settable state. Then use the arrow keys to select the “Date (of Month) Alarm” sub-option. This option is usually not set, but the default value is “ldquo;0””, which means it is applicable every day. If you don't want the system to boot regularly every day, you can also customize which day to start. Then use the arrow keys to move to the "Time(hh:mm:ss) Alarm” sub-option, and set the system to start at the time by “Page UP” key or “Page Down” key, the format is <; Seconds, this time is based on the system clock. Finally press the “ESC” button to exit this menu, then select the “Save & Quit Setup” menu (or press “F10”) and press Enter to save and exit the CMOS settings. Just turn off the power at the next shutdown, you can turn it on regularly. Previous12Next page Total 2 pages

Copyright © Windows knowledge All Rights Reserved