zachgef
2007-05-03, 08:34
Hi All,
First post here. I searched, but couldn't find answers to this particular problem. I was on a computer clean-up binge, and ran spybot (after updating it) for the first time in about two months. It found about 30 problems, in about 10 categories, and cleaned them out. It then informed me that 2 of the problems could not be fixed, and asked if it would be OK to run spybot again at the next start-up. Naturally, I said "yes" (I did not pay attention to what the problems were). I re-booted, and the reboot was incredibly slow. Eventually, the screen showed spybot running, so I attributed the slow boot to that. SB then said it found two problems (I assume the same two), and I elected to delete them. The boot up continued, but the computer would not network and ran incredibly slowly. So I re-booted again. Again it was incredibly slow, with no networking, no sound (except beeps), and no real functionlity. Several reboots result in the same thing. This isn't even safe mode -- more just "lame" mode. The computer runs on Windows XP.
This all happened late in the day, and I had to get home, so I gave up. Now I am thinking of running "recovery" tomorrow morning.
Any advice? Is "recovery" a good first attempt at solving this?
Thanks,
Zach
First post here. I searched, but couldn't find answers to this particular problem. I was on a computer clean-up binge, and ran spybot (after updating it) for the first time in about two months. It found about 30 problems, in about 10 categories, and cleaned them out. It then informed me that 2 of the problems could not be fixed, and asked if it would be OK to run spybot again at the next start-up. Naturally, I said "yes" (I did not pay attention to what the problems were). I re-booted, and the reboot was incredibly slow. Eventually, the screen showed spybot running, so I attributed the slow boot to that. SB then said it found two problems (I assume the same two), and I elected to delete them. The boot up continued, but the computer would not network and ran incredibly slowly. So I re-booted again. Again it was incredibly slow, with no networking, no sound (except beeps), and no real functionlity. Several reboots result in the same thing. This isn't even safe mode -- more just "lame" mode. The computer runs on Windows XP.
This all happened late in the day, and I had to get home, so I gave up. Now I am thinking of running "recovery" tomorrow morning.
Any advice? Is "recovery" a good first attempt at solving this?
Thanks,
Zach