Re: Cannot get past WinXP starting up screen
- From: "Martin C" <martinC@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 23 Jun 2006 08:56:28 +0100
Thanks for all the replies guys. I will keep a record of them for later. For
now, things seem to be running ok again - which is rather spooky as I have
no idea what caused the problem in the first place. I have put the
applications that went missing from the restore point back onto the PC and
this does not seem to have caused the problem again.
It is all a bit weird.
Thanks for the help.
Martin
"Patrick Keenan" <test@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23ZOJ3chlGHA.1640@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
"Martin C" <martinC@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:449a480b$1_1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Not sure what has caused this problem, but whenever I try to start upWinXP
Home SP2, I get as far as the initial startup screen (the black one withthe
WinXP logo in vga mode and the blue 'Knight Rider' scanning gif below it.have
You see the HDD activate for a while, then it just hangs there ad
nausium.
I have tried going into Safe mode and going back a restore point (I had
installed a PC magazine cover full version of Paragon Disk Manager, but
not done anything with it yet. I had also been able to get into XP afterit
had been installed anyway.) Going into Safe mode, I cannot find anything
obviously wrong - no adware, no viruses, no odd changes in the msconfig.
I should also mention at this point that I sometimes have trouble
starting
up the PC in the first place (before I even get to the logo screen - the
monitor does not come out of standby). Not sure if that is related or
not.
The question is:
What normally happens at the vga logo startup that could be causing this
hang up. I eventually managed to get into windows by selecting the 'Use a
configuration that used to work' option, but it still hangs sometimes.
Is there anything I can do to find the culprit?
TIA
Martin
I've had suspiciously good luck, three times in a row on three different
machines, in fixing startup, cycling reboot and keyboard lockup problems
by
simply removing the swap file, which forces it to rebuild.
I stumbled on this because I normally image drives before I work on them
(to
prevent data loss) and I remove the swap and hibernation files first
rather
than back them up. It surprised me when the machines just suddenly
started
working properly when I put the drives back and hadn't done anything else
to
them.
You can do this in a few ways, but one of the quickest is to pop the drive
out (or use an external USB connector) and connect it to another XP
system.
Simply delete the pagefile.sys (and hiberfil.sys) file, it's in the root,
disconnect and put the drive back. Restart.
If you can get into Windows in regular mode, right-click on My Computer,
choose Properties. Go to the Advanced tab and click on settings in the
Performance section. Click on Advanced, then Change in the Virtual Memory
section. On this page, choose No Paging File and Set, then OK. Shut
the
system down and restart in Safe Mode, go to the root and delete the file
"pagefile.sys".
Shut the system down and restart normally. Go back and turn the paging
file on again, and restart again.
HTH
-pk
.
- References:
- Cannot get past WinXP starting up screen
- From: Martin C
- Re: Cannot get past WinXP starting up screen
- From: Patrick Keenan
- Cannot get past WinXP starting up screen
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