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Hey guys, calm down. Dell will happily give you the password if you re-register the machine in your name. There is a form available through either their Website or Faxback service to accomplish a change in ownership. A copy of the Sales receipt will be required at minimum as will other additional documentation in some cases. Notebooks are stolen frequently and Dell is merely attempting to protect the interests of the "owners of record". If you've purchased the notebook legitimately, have records to back your claim and the notebook wasn't reported as stolen by the original owner, Dell is willing to work with you.
If you had purchased a notebook directly from Dell and a thief called Dell for the password, would YOU want Dell to give it to just anyone?
A BIOS level password is the final defense against notebook theft because it makes the machine unusable. All you have to do is provide documentation that your purchase was demonstrably legitimate and Dell will help you
This one seemed most hopeful:
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I have a CPi D266XT and I found out how to bypass the password.. at least to boot to DOS. This may help us with password extracting utilities..
Put in the floppy drive and insert a DOS bootdisk. Then HOLD down the ESC key. Press the power button. Continue to hold the ESC key.. as the little progress bar goes across, near the end it will beep a few times.. then the screen should flash and skip the password screen. Depending how yours is configured, it will attempt to boot from the HDD or the Floppy. Mine, happens to also have a HDD password on it, so I just simply removed the HDD. Then it lets me get to a DOS prompt.
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