try to remove the RAM and repair the OS then it will be solved
Safe Mode is a good way to get the computer running so you can try and figure out why it won't boot up in normal mode. To boot your computer into safe mode do the following. When you turn the computer on start tapping F8 on the keyboard maybe once per second until you see the Safe Mode screen. http://www.onlinecomputertips.com/troubleshooting/safemode.html
No. Safe mode just loads applications and drivers required for windows to start. To restore settings you can run system restore in safe mode. You can also select "Last known good configuration" on the screen you choose to boot into safe mode.
During system boot, press F8 and then select Safe Mode in the menu
See if you can take a photo of the blue screen. If not, boot the computer into safe mode or into command prompt and see if any of the files are corrupt. If the computer continuously reboots, into a blue screen, then it could be corrupted files, or it could be a hardware issue (namely the power supply).
A boot that is frozen in computer language means that a computer started to boot but the screen froze during the boot process. If this happens it might fix the problem if the computer is unplugged for a few seconds and then restarted in Safe Mode.
Yes, you can. You have to boot your system in the Safe mode with network support.
it depends on what PC you have. on apple and windows X.p professional, if the computer is not turned off properly of you had a power , your computer will/might come up a screen saying "your computer was not shut down properly and as a result data was lost. choose safe mode to return this data back or continue normally!" You can also access Safe Mode when you boot up Windows and press F8 repeatedly on the black screen. It'll give you the option to either access Safe Mode, or Safe Mode with Networking.
You press F8 and then choose safe mode from the menu
If you constantly are getting a blue screen then your hard drive is either corrupt or has some corrupt data. Put your computer into safe mode and then do diagnostics on it.
If it is actually booting into safe mode each time, you should get a prompt telling you it is in safe mode. If you don't get that prompt, then you are just dealing with a screen resolution issue. That is, it only looks like safe mode but isn't. In that case, try changing the screen resolution in Windows, and if that is unavailable, get a video card driver from the manufacturer's site and install it (preferably after removing the old one if there is one). If it really is going into safe mode each time, there could be a serious problem with the computer. You might want to disable the automatic restart after a crash (go to the advanced options menu in the menu that comes up during boot). Then you will get the blue screen and whatever error codes the next time the machine hangs. You should log in as the Administrator and run MSCONFIG (type that in the run bar or search box and hit enter). Then tab over to Boot and uncheck Safe Mode if it is checked. You will then be prompted to reboot.
Can you boot into safemode? Press the F8 key repeatedly when booting up. See if you can do a system restore inside of safe mode.
boot the computer...the first screen you should see should have a loading bar...the second should be black with a blue bar on top...once you get on this screen hit f8 twice...then just select safe mode and there should be a new profile you can choose from called administrator without a password...it only appears in safe mode-on this screen name you can do pretty much anything but access files blocked by the screen name that created them