Lenovo P1 Gen 4 Bios Portable -

: This model features a Self-Healing BIOS , which can automatically recover from corruption by reverting to a backed-up version. Critical BIOS Settings Drivers & Software - Lenovo Support

This is Lenovo’s firmware-based TPM 2.0. It must be enabled for Windows 11 compliance and BitLocker drive encryption.

Keeping the BIOS updated ensures system stability and security. An easy guide to BIOS - ThinkPad P1 - Lenovo lenovo p1 gen 4 bios

The currently installed (found on the Main page).

: If you need to make USB the default boot device, you'll need to change the boot order permanently in the BIOS. Access the BIOS by restarting and pressing F1 . Navigate to the Startup menu. Under "Boot," use the arrow keys to highlight your USB drive. Then use the + or - keys to move it to the top of the boot priority list. Press F10 to save and exit. Your ThinkPad will now always attempt to boot from a connected USB drive first. : This model features a Self-Healing BIOS ,

: Power on or restart the system and immediately press F1 (or Fn+F1 ) several times when the Lenovo logo appears to enter the UEFI BIOS menu .

Located under , this setting controls how your laptop routes graphics processing: Keeping the BIOS updated ensures system stability and

For security reasons, there is no master backdoor password. The only official remedy for a forgotten Supervisor Password is a physical motherboard replacement. Issue 4: "Secure Boot Violation" on Startup

While modern BIOS updates are generally safe, a failure (e.g., due to a sudden power outage) can "brick" the computer. Lenovo has a built-in recovery procedure for this scenario.

: This model features a Self-Healing BIOS , which can automatically recover from corruption by reverting to a backed-up version. Critical BIOS Settings Drivers & Software - Lenovo Support

This is Lenovo’s firmware-based TPM 2.0. It must be enabled for Windows 11 compliance and BitLocker drive encryption.

Keeping the BIOS updated ensures system stability and security. An easy guide to BIOS - ThinkPad P1 - Lenovo

The currently installed (found on the Main page).

: If you need to make USB the default boot device, you'll need to change the boot order permanently in the BIOS. Access the BIOS by restarting and pressing F1 . Navigate to the Startup menu. Under "Boot," use the arrow keys to highlight your USB drive. Then use the + or - keys to move it to the top of the boot priority list. Press F10 to save and exit. Your ThinkPad will now always attempt to boot from a connected USB drive first.

: Power on or restart the system and immediately press F1 (or Fn+F1 ) several times when the Lenovo logo appears to enter the UEFI BIOS menu .

Located under , this setting controls how your laptop routes graphics processing:

For security reasons, there is no master backdoor password. The only official remedy for a forgotten Supervisor Password is a physical motherboard replacement. Issue 4: "Secure Boot Violation" on Startup

While modern BIOS updates are generally safe, a failure (e.g., due to a sudden power outage) can "brick" the computer. Lenovo has a built-in recovery procedure for this scenario.