ChatterBank0 min ago
My pc is done in!!
11 Answers
Every time I boot up it tells me that it has to run the check disk facility (or something) when it runs it just keeps booting up again and running the check again. The internet connection keeps failing. I've run avg, spybot, adware, cleanup and defrag as suggested by a friend but all to no avail. Any suggestions (other than the bin) would be gratefully received
Cheers
F
Cheers
F
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Fee_B77. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.What operating system are you using ? If it is Win98, then try pressing and holding F8 as soon as you switch-on, so you can get to the dos prompt (c:\>)
From there, type cd\windows\system\command and press ENTER. Then type chkdsk followed by enter. Does the program run correctly, without rebooting ?
From there, type cd\windows\system\command and press ENTER. Then type chkdsk followed by enter. Does the program run correctly, without rebooting ?
Hiya, sorry if I haven't made myself quite clear. Not very good at this malarkey. The PC isn't rebooting voluntarily. When I switch it on it does the check disk thing then gets to the end of the check and it runs again over and over. If I cancel the check it boots up but my internet connection keeps failing. Every now and then I get a warning pop up that the file I'm using is corrupt and I should run the check disk facility. Can be anything from msn messenger to windows itself. I'm using Windows XP. All fully updated etc. Many thanks for your advise so far. I really do appreciate your time.
F
F
This could be a number of things but I would first of all strongly advise that if you can access your files BACK UP everything important NOW.
The last time this happened to me - about 8 months ago it was a failing hard drive and that was only 4 months old.
It could be that something is running in the background causing windows not to load properly - such as antivirus- try to boot with this disabled - but not connected to the internet.
It could be a corrupted boot record try running the windows xp disc.Choose install not repair then choose the repair action which should tell you to use the fixboot or similar command.
have you recently downloaded any driver updates or similar that could be causing a conflict.
have you tried using system restore to revert back to atime before these problems.
finally try to go to Control panel >Performance and maintenance>Admin Tools>Event Viewer>System
Can you see any entries in red showing errors
Good luck
The last time this happened to me - about 8 months ago it was a failing hard drive and that was only 4 months old.
It could be that something is running in the background causing windows not to load properly - such as antivirus- try to boot with this disabled - but not connected to the internet.
It could be a corrupted boot record try running the windows xp disc.Choose install not repair then choose the repair action which should tell you to use the fixboot or similar command.
have you recently downloaded any driver updates or similar that could be causing a conflict.
have you tried using system restore to revert back to atime before these problems.
finally try to go to Control panel >Performance and maintenance>Admin Tools>Event Viewer>System
Can you see any entries in red showing errors
Good luck
If system restore does not do the trick, you might try this:-
START>RUN type in msconfig and press ENTER
In the resultant screen, select STARTUP, then uncheck everything that's there. Reboot and assess the result. If the problem disappears, you could then repeat the procedure, putting everything back into startup, one at a time, until you find the application that is causing the problem.
START>RUN type in msconfig and press ENTER
In the resultant screen, select STARTUP, then uncheck everything that's there. Reboot and assess the result. If the problem disappears, you could then repeat the procedure, putting everything back into startup, one at a time, until you find the application that is causing the problem.