I haven't got the cd unfortunately mate :(
Ok I can't help myself..lol
So I have now booted in safe mode and can see all of my files so one would assume my drive is still ok?
That's fine I can deal with that...lol
Thanks mate!
Todd, I can't run check disk..Attachment 36037Attachment 36038
There's a restore point from 5 days ago, should I try that?
Righto I give up..lol
Can't restore because its found local disk errors and wants to check errors but you can only schedule error checking on next start up which will fail... Lol
For Lucas, I would strongly advise against using HP restore. While it does restore your laptop it also fills your hard drive with all the unnecessary crap that HP want you to use. What I would do and do for all my laptops and pc's, BA knows how many I got,
- get all the drivers from the HP website for your laptop, unzip them if they are zip files and put them onto a USB stick.
- Then grab copy of your chosen O/s, put it in your laptop, reboot and reload fresh.
- Then just put the drivers in for the LAN, USB, touchpad, graphics, wireless card, chipset drivers etc etc.
- Then do an Windose update, put your favorite A/v on, not Norton for the love of god
- Then load on your favorite browser, email program (don't forget to back up your email data too) and Micro$oft Office program
- Download the latest is Adode Reader, Flash player plugin etc etc
For Andy.
Sounds like your graphics driver is foobar from the sudden shut down. Because you can get into safe mode its a software issue. No biggie. Many things to try, uninstalling the graphics drive when in safe mode, reboot and reload the driver. The screen will be all out of wack with no drivers but its manageable to surf the net to find the driver if you don't already have it.
Boot into safe mode and you should get an option to boot to the last known good configuration, or something along the lines of that. Try this. Or....
Boot into Safe mode, click start > My Computer > Right click on your primary drive C: it usually is > click properties > click tools in the upper tab > clcik check now under error checking > select "Automatically fix file system errors" It will then say it wants to do this check upon the next restart etc etc, select yes and then restart.
Or
Boot into safe mode again, once in Windose, Select the Run tab, type in cmd. This will bring up a black screen. If your O/s is loaded onto the C: drive type in chkdsk /f. The /f is the command to find and fix file system errors, if you type /r instead of f this command will find and fix file system errors but also scan for and try to recover bad sectors on the hard drive.
Both options here do the same thing but in different ways.
Something I always used to push onto my customers is back, back backup! Get yourself a NAS (Network Attached Storage) or even a portable hard drive and back the shit up!!!!.
Cloud storage is great for important files etc, I use dropbox, to back up my emails and other files. Free accounts for up to around 50GB are available. Plus you can have dropbox on your smart phone too and when you take a pic anywhere, you can upload it to drop box on your phone, then when you get home you can see the pic on your computer without plugging a cable in.
Business stuff goes onto my NAS ( and onto a portable drive kept off site) which holds 6 x 2TB drives, it uses only five and the sixth one just sits there and if one drive goes south the sixth will take over the foobar drive and then email me if this happens.
Every laptop and pc I have I keep all the drivers on the NAS, all Windose Discs, Micro$soft dics, anything I have created image files and store them on my NAS.
But as for your issue. It will be a driver issue I reckon if you can get into safe mode fine.
I'm not a fan of system restore or repair, MS failed big time on both.
At what point are you running chkdsk? So by the sound of it you can boot up in safe mode and windows loads up so yes your data files should be fine.
If you can safe boot with networking and have internet access just download Windows XP black edition and re install windows