English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2007-02-12 15:56:05 · 8 answers · asked by rdcatman 3 in Computers & Internet Hardware Desktops

8 answers

It could be to many things but the first thing I would do is restart the computer, after your BIOS splash screen disappears press the space bar in 2 second intervals, then start the computer in Last good known configuration, if this does not work, think if you have installed a new piece of software or hardware, if you installed a new piece of hardware turn the system off, remove and turn the system on, if this works then download the latest drivers from the manufactures web site and install the drivers first and the add the hardware.

If it was software then reboot the system and after the BIOS splash screen start pressing the F8 key in 2 second intervals, navigate to Safe mode and press enter, once in Windows go to Control Panel, Add/Remove programs and uninstall the program that was installed.

Restart your system with your Windows 2000 or XP CD depending on which version of Windows your using, navigate to the Recovery Console, select partition 1, type your admin password (if any) and do the following:
1.- Once you get to the prompt type fixboot and press enter
2.- Press "y" and press enter
3.- After the process is complete type fixmbr and press enter
4.- After you confirm the process remove the CD and reboot the computer.

If this does not work, backup all your data and reinstall the Operating System, if you have problems reinstalling the operating system your hard drive is bad and needs to be replace.

Hope this helps.

2007-02-12 16:13:24 · answer #1 · answered by MexicaliDad 2 · 0 1

You may have RAM overload. If you have wallpaper and/or a screensaver, reset them to blank or none. Then, check your startup menu and remove anything you don't use on a daily basis.
To do this: cl Start, cl Settings, cl Taskbar and Start Menu.
- cl Start Menu, cl Customize, cl Remove.
- cl the icon for the program you wish to remove
- then cl Remove.
- This will prevent the program from loading at startup, but will not remove the program from the hard disk.


Blue Screen of Death
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Blue Screen of Death (sometimes called "bluescreen", "stop error" or just abbreviated as "BSoD") is a popular name for the screen displayed by Microsoft's Windows operating system when it cannot recover from, or is in danger of being unable to recover from, a system error. There are two Windows error screens that are both referred to as the blue screen of death, with one (Windows NT 4/2000/XP) being significantly more serious than the other (Windows 9x).

Blue Screen of Death
Last modified: Friday, June 13, 2003
Abbreviated BSOD, an error that can appear on computers running in a Windows environment. This includes even the earliest versions of Windows, such as Windows 3.0 and 3.1, and still occurs in later versions such as Microsoft Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows NT, and Windows 2000. Jokingly called the blue screen of death because when the error occurs, the screen turns blue, and the computer almost always freezes and requires rebooting.
Source: http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/B/blue_screen_of_death.html

2007-02-12 16:02:52 · answer #2 · answered by TheHumbleOne 7 · 0 1

that really depends on what caused the bluescreen. there are different bluescreens. their difference is in what the white letters say. depending on the error determines the message on the bsod and also determines what to do to fix the problem. usually when a bsod occurs, your only option is to do a cold boot. that is, manually reboot the machine by pressing the power button. rebooting by using ctrl/alt/del or start/shutdown/restart is called a warm boot. after the reboot, it's best to boot up in safe mode so you have the oppurtunity to find out what caused the bsod in the first place without the system crashing again yeilding another bsod. so, read what the bsod says then reboot in safe mode and do your best to fix the error. That, in a nutshell, is how to cure the BSoD. good luck

2007-02-12 19:15:56 · answer #3 · answered by JizZ E. Jizzy 2 · 0 0

unmountable boot quantity that's an blunders with the puzzlingcontinual. the treatment relies upon on the reason a million. the documents interior thecontinual may well be corrupted. if it incredibly is the reason, then you definately could reinstall the working equipment. restoration the working equipment employing a restoration disc, or greater valuable yet, reinstall the working equipment from scratch. if that wont help, then meaning thecontinual is broken. no thank you to repair that.you may purchase a brand newcontinual on your laptop. yet in the previous you do any of this, attempt first removing thecontinual and then reinserting it (wont paintings in case you have an ssdcontinual). and it would additionally be that thecontinual is overheating.

2016-10-02 01:30:41 · answer #4 · answered by luera 4 · 0 0

If you are running Win XP - blue screens are usually hardware issues. There are many sites on the Internet to analyze the stop code you are getting. Copy it down and Google the stop code on a working computer - the possibilities as to what is wrong with your computer are too numerous to mention.

2007-02-12 16:00:34 · answer #5 · answered by sosguy 7 · 0 0

Usually just restore the last known good configuration. If that doesn't work, try undoing any changes you made recently before the error occurred, such as removing new hardware or removing certain apps or updates. The almost sure-fix is to wipe your computer clean and reinstall Windows.

2007-02-12 16:00:40 · answer #6 · answered by koovaaa 2 · 0 1

Reinstall the operating system.

2007-02-12 15:58:08 · answer #7 · answered by DaProfessor 3 · 0 0

with CNTRL+ALT+DEL keys...if this doesn't work then reboot your machine.

2007-02-12 16:00:00 · answer #8 · answered by EddieS 2 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers