windows 7 Home Premium (64 bit) won't boot up, I've tried system repair startup The Next CEO...
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windows 7 Home Premium (64 bit) won't boot up, I've tried system repair startup
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I've been trying to get my computer to boot up in the last 2 hours. I've tried using the system repair at start up, but all that does is it sends me to a screen with the stock Windows background that is enlarged with a cursor on the screen. It's not frozen and I can move the cursor around, but there is nothing to click on. I've tried to get into Task Manager and such, but the shortcut doesn't work. I have no back ups of the OS as it came pre-installed on the computer. Is there anyway for me to get my computer to work (I don't mind starting fresh)? I do have access to another computer but it's my brothers and it has Windows XP (I'd like to keep my Windows 7).
windows-7 windows boot
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 2 mins ago
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I've been trying to get my computer to boot up in the last 2 hours. I've tried using the system repair at start up, but all that does is it sends me to a screen with the stock Windows background that is enlarged with a cursor on the screen. It's not frozen and I can move the cursor around, but there is nothing to click on. I've tried to get into Task Manager and such, but the shortcut doesn't work. I have no back ups of the OS as it came pre-installed on the computer. Is there anyway for me to get my computer to work (I don't mind starting fresh)? I do have access to another computer but it's my brothers and it has Windows XP (I'd like to keep my Windows 7).
windows-7 windows boot
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 2 mins ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
Have you tried booting to a Windows 7 installation disk to get to the repair tools. Because the system repair console should have been offered, since its not offered, you might be out of luck.
– Ramhound
Jun 9 '14 at 11:18
@Ramhound but thats the thing I don't have a Window 7 installation disc as the OS came pre-installed :(
– KamilB
Jun 9 '14 at 11:34
Say if I create a "system repair disc" on a Windows 7 32-bit machine would it still work on my 64 bit??
– KamilB
Jun 9 '14 at 11:48
A system repair disk made by a 32-bit operating system is not compatible with a 64-bit operatng system. It also has to be Windows 7, the repair disk for Windows XP is different from Windows 7 which is diffrent From Windows 8.0 which is different from Windows 8.1
– Ramhound
Jun 9 '14 at 12:16
Have you tried running in Safe Mode and disabling any startup programs? Scan for viruses? System restore?
– KingsInnerSoul
Jun 9 '14 at 12:30
|
show 1 more comment
I've been trying to get my computer to boot up in the last 2 hours. I've tried using the system repair at start up, but all that does is it sends me to a screen with the stock Windows background that is enlarged with a cursor on the screen. It's not frozen and I can move the cursor around, but there is nothing to click on. I've tried to get into Task Manager and such, but the shortcut doesn't work. I have no back ups of the OS as it came pre-installed on the computer. Is there anyway for me to get my computer to work (I don't mind starting fresh)? I do have access to another computer but it's my brothers and it has Windows XP (I'd like to keep my Windows 7).
windows-7 windows boot
I've been trying to get my computer to boot up in the last 2 hours. I've tried using the system repair at start up, but all that does is it sends me to a screen with the stock Windows background that is enlarged with a cursor on the screen. It's not frozen and I can move the cursor around, but there is nothing to click on. I've tried to get into Task Manager and such, but the shortcut doesn't work. I have no back ups of the OS as it came pre-installed on the computer. Is there anyway for me to get my computer to work (I don't mind starting fresh)? I do have access to another computer but it's my brothers and it has Windows XP (I'd like to keep my Windows 7).
windows-7 windows boot
windows-7 windows boot
edited Jun 9 '14 at 12:55
user304064
asked Jun 9 '14 at 11:08
KamilBKamilB
11
11
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 2 mins ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 2 mins ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
Have you tried booting to a Windows 7 installation disk to get to the repair tools. Because the system repair console should have been offered, since its not offered, you might be out of luck.
– Ramhound
Jun 9 '14 at 11:18
@Ramhound but thats the thing I don't have a Window 7 installation disc as the OS came pre-installed :(
– KamilB
Jun 9 '14 at 11:34
Say if I create a "system repair disc" on a Windows 7 32-bit machine would it still work on my 64 bit??
– KamilB
Jun 9 '14 at 11:48
A system repair disk made by a 32-bit operating system is not compatible with a 64-bit operatng system. It also has to be Windows 7, the repair disk for Windows XP is different from Windows 7 which is diffrent From Windows 8.0 which is different from Windows 8.1
– Ramhound
Jun 9 '14 at 12:16
Have you tried running in Safe Mode and disabling any startup programs? Scan for viruses? System restore?
– KingsInnerSoul
Jun 9 '14 at 12:30
|
show 1 more comment
Have you tried booting to a Windows 7 installation disk to get to the repair tools. Because the system repair console should have been offered, since its not offered, you might be out of luck.
– Ramhound
Jun 9 '14 at 11:18
@Ramhound but thats the thing I don't have a Window 7 installation disc as the OS came pre-installed :(
– KamilB
Jun 9 '14 at 11:34
Say if I create a "system repair disc" on a Windows 7 32-bit machine would it still work on my 64 bit??
– KamilB
Jun 9 '14 at 11:48
A system repair disk made by a 32-bit operating system is not compatible with a 64-bit operatng system. It also has to be Windows 7, the repair disk for Windows XP is different from Windows 7 which is diffrent From Windows 8.0 which is different from Windows 8.1
– Ramhound
Jun 9 '14 at 12:16
Have you tried running in Safe Mode and disabling any startup programs? Scan for viruses? System restore?
– KingsInnerSoul
Jun 9 '14 at 12:30
Have you tried booting to a Windows 7 installation disk to get to the repair tools. Because the system repair console should have been offered, since its not offered, you might be out of luck.
– Ramhound
Jun 9 '14 at 11:18
Have you tried booting to a Windows 7 installation disk to get to the repair tools. Because the system repair console should have been offered, since its not offered, you might be out of luck.
– Ramhound
Jun 9 '14 at 11:18
@Ramhound but thats the thing I don't have a Window 7 installation disc as the OS came pre-installed :(
– KamilB
Jun 9 '14 at 11:34
@Ramhound but thats the thing I don't have a Window 7 installation disc as the OS came pre-installed :(
– KamilB
Jun 9 '14 at 11:34
Say if I create a "system repair disc" on a Windows 7 32-bit machine would it still work on my 64 bit??
– KamilB
Jun 9 '14 at 11:48
Say if I create a "system repair disc" on a Windows 7 32-bit machine would it still work on my 64 bit??
– KamilB
Jun 9 '14 at 11:48
A system repair disk made by a 32-bit operating system is not compatible with a 64-bit operatng system. It also has to be Windows 7, the repair disk for Windows XP is different from Windows 7 which is diffrent From Windows 8.0 which is different from Windows 8.1
– Ramhound
Jun 9 '14 at 12:16
A system repair disk made by a 32-bit operating system is not compatible with a 64-bit operatng system. It also has to be Windows 7, the repair disk for Windows XP is different from Windows 7 which is diffrent From Windows 8.0 which is different from Windows 8.1
– Ramhound
Jun 9 '14 at 12:16
Have you tried running in Safe Mode and disabling any startup programs? Scan for viruses? System restore?
– KingsInnerSoul
Jun 9 '14 at 12:30
Have you tried running in Safe Mode and disabling any startup programs? Scan for viruses? System restore?
– KingsInnerSoul
Jun 9 '14 at 12:30
|
show 1 more comment
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
You can download a Windows 7/64 ISO from DigitalRiver and make a bootable DVD or USB.
Using that Windows 7/64 installation DVD/USB you can run Start-Up Repair (up to 3 consecutive runs with rebooting after each run until no error).
See details for obtaining Windows 7 ISO and repair steps.
If Start-Up Repair from DVD/USB cannot fix the problem then you could save your personal files to another DVD/USB and reinstall Windows 7.
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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You can download a Windows 7/64 ISO from DigitalRiver and make a bootable DVD or USB.
Using that Windows 7/64 installation DVD/USB you can run Start-Up Repair (up to 3 consecutive runs with rebooting after each run until no error).
See details for obtaining Windows 7 ISO and repair steps.
If Start-Up Repair from DVD/USB cannot fix the problem then you could save your personal files to another DVD/USB and reinstall Windows 7.
add a comment |
You can download a Windows 7/64 ISO from DigitalRiver and make a bootable DVD or USB.
Using that Windows 7/64 installation DVD/USB you can run Start-Up Repair (up to 3 consecutive runs with rebooting after each run until no error).
See details for obtaining Windows 7 ISO and repair steps.
If Start-Up Repair from DVD/USB cannot fix the problem then you could save your personal files to another DVD/USB and reinstall Windows 7.
add a comment |
You can download a Windows 7/64 ISO from DigitalRiver and make a bootable DVD or USB.
Using that Windows 7/64 installation DVD/USB you can run Start-Up Repair (up to 3 consecutive runs with rebooting after each run until no error).
See details for obtaining Windows 7 ISO and repair steps.
If Start-Up Repair from DVD/USB cannot fix the problem then you could save your personal files to another DVD/USB and reinstall Windows 7.
You can download a Windows 7/64 ISO from DigitalRiver and make a bootable DVD or USB.
Using that Windows 7/64 installation DVD/USB you can run Start-Up Repair (up to 3 consecutive runs with rebooting after each run until no error).
See details for obtaining Windows 7 ISO and repair steps.
If Start-Up Repair from DVD/USB cannot fix the problem then you could save your personal files to another DVD/USB and reinstall Windows 7.
edited Jun 12 '14 at 9:02
answered Jun 12 '14 at 8:56
snayobsnayob
3,90911018
3,90911018
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Have you tried booting to a Windows 7 installation disk to get to the repair tools. Because the system repair console should have been offered, since its not offered, you might be out of luck.
– Ramhound
Jun 9 '14 at 11:18
@Ramhound but thats the thing I don't have a Window 7 installation disc as the OS came pre-installed :(
– KamilB
Jun 9 '14 at 11:34
Say if I create a "system repair disc" on a Windows 7 32-bit machine would it still work on my 64 bit??
– KamilB
Jun 9 '14 at 11:48
A system repair disk made by a 32-bit operating system is not compatible with a 64-bit operatng system. It also has to be Windows 7, the repair disk for Windows XP is different from Windows 7 which is diffrent From Windows 8.0 which is different from Windows 8.1
– Ramhound
Jun 9 '14 at 12:16
Have you tried running in Safe Mode and disabling any startup programs? Scan for viruses? System restore?
– KingsInnerSoul
Jun 9 '14 at 12:30