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| Performance and Maintainance of Windows Vista A forum for performance and maintenance tasks in Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintainance) |
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I began a Startup Repair more than five hours ago. Surely this can't be
right. If I shut down and try to Restore to an Earlier Point, could this make things worse? |
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On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 18:11:54 +0100, "John Harris"
wrote: I began a Startup Repair more than five hours ago. Surely this can't be right. If I shut down and try to Restore to an Earlier Point, could this make things worse? What do you mean by a "startup repair"? Exactly what did you do? -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
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On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 18:11:54 +0100, "John Harris"
wrote: I began a Startup Repair more than five hours ago. Surely this can't be right. If I shut down and try to Restore to an Earlier Point, could this make things worse? What do you mean by a "startup repair"? Exactly what did you do? -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
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"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 18:11:54 +0100, "John Harris" wrote: I began a Startup Repair more than five hours ago. Surely this can't be right. If I shut down and try to Restore to an Earlier Point, could this make things worse? What do you mean by a "startup repair"? Exactly what did you do? -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup Read his first post at 10:44AM today. Or, better yet, he "I installed SP1 onto a laptop and after about three quarters of an hour into the process, the laptop switched itself off. I restarted and got a choice between Repair or Start Windows normally. I made the mistake of picking the second option. A huge series of files began to be opened, with the names of each flashing on the screen. Then it seemed to get stuck on a file in the registry. Or it may have been opening a long series of files with the same address because I couldn't see the end of the filenames. At this point I restarted and picked the F8 option. I chose the Repair option from a list of about 8 options (including Restore to an earlier point). This led once again to my original choice of Repair or restart normally. I now picked Repair. That was about three hours ago. The repair process still appears to be going ahead. Do I just have to be patient, or has the repair system stalled? Thanks for any suggestions. JH " SC Tom |
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"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 18:11:54 +0100, "John Harris" wrote: I began a Startup Repair more than five hours ago. Surely this can't be right. If I shut down and try to Restore to an Earlier Point, could this make things worse? What do you mean by a "startup repair"? Exactly what did you do? -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup Read his first post at 10:44AM today. Or, better yet, he "I installed SP1 onto a laptop and after about three quarters of an hour into the process, the laptop switched itself off. I restarted and got a choice between Repair or Start Windows normally. I made the mistake of picking the second option. A huge series of files began to be opened, with the names of each flashing on the screen. Then it seemed to get stuck on a file in the registry. Or it may have been opening a long series of files with the same address because I couldn't see the end of the filenames. At this point I restarted and picked the F8 option. I chose the Repair option from a list of about 8 options (including Restore to an earlier point). This led once again to my original choice of Repair or restart normally. I now picked Repair. That was about three hours ago. The repair process still appears to be going ahead. Do I just have to be patient, or has the repair system stalled? Thanks for any suggestions. JH " SC Tom |
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On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 16:47:04 -0400, "SC Tom" wrote:
"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 18:11:54 +0100, "John Harris" wrote: I began a Startup Repair more than five hours ago. Surely this can't be right. If I shut down and try to Restore to an Earlier Point, could this make things worse? What do you mean by a "startup repair"? Exactly what did you do? -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup Read his first post at 10:44AM today. Or, better yet, he "I installed SP1 onto a laptop and after about three quarters of an hour into the process, the laptop switched itself off. I restarted and got a choice between Repair or Start Windows normally. " Thanks, but for John Harris's benefit, let me explain several things: 1. If you start a new thread, rather than reply to an existing one, it's exceedingly difficult for someone reading the message to associate the two. Once you ask a question, all follow-up messages should be by replying to the existing thread, not by posting a new message. 2. If there was a previous message, and you don't quote any of it, it's exceedingly difficult to associate the two. Many of us here (me, for example) don't save already-read messages, and without a quote, a message can be very hard to understand. 3. What you did is called a "repair installation," not a "startup repair." I know that for many people, it's very hard to know what the right terminology is, but I urge you to work hard to be sure you are calling something by the correct name. If you don't do so, you run the substantial risk that your question will not be understood. Worse, it may be *misunderstood*, and you may therefore get the wrong answer. I asked what you meant, rather than guessing, but some people will guess, and some of them will guess wrong. And one point for you: what you see as 10:44AM on your newsreader will have a different time for everyone in a different time zone. -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
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On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 16:47:04 -0400, "SC Tom" wrote: "Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 18:11:54 +0100, "John Harris" wrote: I began a Startup Repair more than five hours ago. Surely this can't be right. If I shut down and try to Restore to an Earlier Point, could this make things worse? What do you mean by a "startup repair"? Exactly what did you do? -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup Read his first post at 10:44AM today. Or, better yet, he "I installed SP1 onto a laptop and after about three quarters of an hour into the process, the laptop switched itself off. I restarted and got a choice between Repair or Start Windows normally. " Thanks, but for John Harris's benefit, let me explain several things: 1. If you start a new thread, rather than reply to an existing one, it's exceedingly difficult for someone reading the message to associate the two. Once you ask a question, all follow-up messages should be by replying to the existing thread, not by posting a new message. 2. If there was a previous message, and you don't quote any of it, it's exceedingly difficult to associate the two. Many of us here (me, for example) don't save already-read messages, and without a quote, a message can be very hard to understand. 3. What you did is called a "repair installation," not a "startup repair." I know that for many people, it's very hard to know what the right terminology is, but I urge you to work hard to be sure you are calling something by the correct name. If you don't do so, you run the substantial risk that your question will not be understood. Worse, it may be *misunderstood*, and you may therefore get the wrong answer. I asked what you meant, rather than guessing, but some people will guess, and some of them will guess wrong. And one point for you: what you see as 10:44AM on your newsreader will have a different time for everyone in a different time zone. -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
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"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 16:47:04 -0400, "SC Tom" wrote: "Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 18:11:54 +0100, "John Harris" wrote: I began a Startup Repair more than five hours ago. Surely this can't be right. If I shut down and try to Restore to an Earlier Point, could this make things worse? What do you mean by a "startup repair"? Exactly what did you do? -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup Read his first post at 10:44AM today. Or, better yet, he "I installed SP1 onto a laptop and after about three quarters of an hour into the process, the laptop switched itself off. I restarted and got a choice between Repair or Start Windows normally. " Thanks, but for John Harris's benefit, let me explain several things: 1. If you start a new thread, rather than reply to an existing one, it's exceedingly difficult for someone reading the message to associate the two. Once you ask a question, all follow-up messages should be by replying to the existing thread, not by posting a new message. 2. If there was a previous message, and you don't quote any of it, it's exceedingly difficult to associate the two. Many of us here (me, for example) don't save already-read messages, and without a quote, a message can be very hard to understand. 3. What you did is called a "repair installation," not a "startup repair." I know that for many people, it's very hard to know what the right terminology is, but I urge you to work hard to be sure you are calling something by the correct name. If you don't do so, you run the substantial risk that your question will not be understood. Worse, it may be *misunderstood*, and you may therefore get the wrong answer. I asked what you meant, rather than guessing, but some people will guess, and some of them will guess wrong. And one point for you: what you see as 10:44AM on your newsreader will have a different time for everyone in a different time zone. -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup This is true. I should have said 10:44AM EDST :-) SC Tom |
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"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 16:47:04 -0400, "SC Tom" wrote: "Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 18:11:54 +0100, "John Harris" wrote: I began a Startup Repair more than five hours ago. Surely this can't be right. If I shut down and try to Restore to an Earlier Point, could this make things worse? What do you mean by a "startup repair"? Exactly what did you do? -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup Read his first post at 10:44AM today. Or, better yet, he "I installed SP1 onto a laptop and after about three quarters of an hour into the process, the laptop switched itself off. I restarted and got a choice between Repair or Start Windows normally. " Thanks, but for John Harris's benefit, let me explain several things: 1. If you start a new thread, rather than reply to an existing one, it's exceedingly difficult for someone reading the message to associate the two. Once you ask a question, all follow-up messages should be by replying to the existing thread, not by posting a new message. 2. If there was a previous message, and you don't quote any of it, it's exceedingly difficult to associate the two. Many of us here (me, for example) don't save already-read messages, and without a quote, a message can be very hard to understand. 3. What you did is called a "repair installation," not a "startup repair." I know that for many people, it's very hard to know what the right terminology is, but I urge you to work hard to be sure you are calling something by the correct name. If you don't do so, you run the substantial risk that your question will not be understood. Worse, it may be *misunderstood*, and you may therefore get the wrong answer. I asked what you meant, rather than guessing, but some people will guess, and some of them will guess wrong. And one point for you: what you see as 10:44AM on your newsreader will have a different time for everyone in a different time zone. -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup This is true. I should have said 10:44AM EDST :-) SC Tom |
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On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 21:09:45 -0400, "SC Tom" wrote:
"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 16:47:04 -0400, "SC Tom" wrote: "Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message ... On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 18:11:54 +0100, "John Harris" wrote: I began a Startup Repair more than five hours ago. Surely this can't be right. If I shut down and try to Restore to an Earlier Point, could this make things worse? What do you mean by a "startup repair"? Exactly what did you do? -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup Read his first post at 10:44AM today. Or, better yet, he "I installed SP1 onto a laptop and after about three quarters of an hour into the process, the laptop switched itself off. I restarted and got a choice between Repair or Start Windows normally. " Thanks, but for John Harris's benefit, let me explain several things: 1. If you start a new thread, rather than reply to an existing one, it's exceedingly difficult for someone reading the message to associate the two. Once you ask a question, all follow-up messages should be by replying to the existing thread, not by posting a new message. 2. If there was a previous message, and you don't quote any of it, it's exceedingly difficult to associate the two. Many of us here (me, for example) don't save already-read messages, and without a quote, a message can be very hard to understand. 3. What you did is called a "repair installation," not a "startup repair." I know that for many people, it's very hard to know what the right terminology is, but I urge you to work hard to be sure you are calling something by the correct name. If you don't do so, you run the substantial risk that your question will not be understood. Worse, it may be *misunderstood*, and you may therefore get the wrong answer. I asked what you meant, rather than guessing, but some people will guess, and some of them will guess wrong. And one point for you: what you see as 10:44AM on your newsreader will have a different time for everyone in a different time zone. -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup This is true. I should have said 10:44AM EDST :-) That would have helped, but no big deal. I should said it was a *minor* point. -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003 Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
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