The ultimate laptop problem/dillemma/catch22

klm2010

New Member
Hey you all, I'm a new member here but certainly not new to computers. I've got a problem that has stumped me hard, and major props go to anybody inventive enough to suggest a fix for it...

What I need to do is reset the CMOS (BIOS) from Inside windows. Now here's the story.

I came across a gateway 7330 laptop (XP) with some pretty bad infections. I naturally installed malwarebytes to nuke the stuff (not in safe mode, stupidly..) and the virus was smart enough to kill it. I go to reboot into safe mode.
I discover that in the BIOS (and in windows too, but I didn't test it till then) that the enter and a few of the arrow keys don't work. The arrow keys aren't an issue, there are fn keys to get around it, but enter is a big deal.
No big deal, I say, and plug in my USB keyboard. Everything works fine.
I go to safe mode, and it bluescreens. Every boot option bluescreens almost immediately. My thoughts go to chkdsk, I run chkdsk off the windows CD and everthing checks out.
I google my error and get some results about bios settings. Ok, I'll try disabling everything and see if that works. Then I can slowly enable them until I find the problem, right?
Unfortunately, "legacy USB" was one of the settings I disabled.

goodbye, USB keyboard.

goodbye, enter key.

I need the enter key to change the bios settings. both for enabling and resetting to defaults, I've tried every combination. And for re-installing XP.
That's my goal now, to reinstall XP. I nearly threw it out the window when it booted from the xp cd and it said "To install windows, press ENTER now." I've managed to install windows vista (mouse-friendly installer, after making a partition for it with a linux livecd), and can get the USB keyboard working from there. But as much as I love 7, I need xp on this machine.

What can I do? it's a catch-22.
I figure I can reset the CMOS to re-enable legacy USB, but the only ways I have found are through DOS (needs enter key), through the BIOS itself (needs enter key), or by physically removing the battery. (it's a laptop, and if I could find the battery, there's no guarantee it would be removable).
How can I reset the CMOS from inside Windows, or find another way of inputting keystrokes?

Normally I can solve just about any computer problem, but this one blows my mind.
Any ideas would be unprecedentedly appreciated.
 
You can't reset the cmos within windows. The only to actually reset everything to defaults would be to update the bios but without the enter key it might be hard. You might be up the creek without a paddle.
 
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