You won't be able to boot unless you can repair the operating system. If you have an install disk you can try and attempt a repair. If this is critcal data, you may want to purchase a new drive, install your OS, and hook the bad drive up as a second drive. You can then copy your data to the new drive. You won't be able to boot unless you can repair the operating system. If you have an install disk you can try and attempt a repair. If this is critcal data, you may want to purchase a new drive, install your OS, and hook the bad drive up as a second drive. You can then copy your data to the new drive.
The System32 folder and its subfolders contain the core operating system files for your Windows installation. No matter what anyone tells you do not delete this folder. Tampering with any single file may make you computer a paperweight.
Your motherboard (commonly called your processor) is the brain of your computer, it tells your computer what to do from boot up to shut down, it tells your hard drive to boot up Windows when you boot up your computer, and to shut down Windows when you turn it off. It controls every piece of hardware in your computer.
Its a file that tell you when windows has cleaned up, or fixed something. It tells you EXACTLY what commands it has performed. It is fine to delete it. (Mostly used on USB Drives)
windows xp
It is tired
It is your hard drive, most likely it is not SCSI, it is SATA, just Windows recognize it as SCSI. You really should not attempt to remove it if it is the main HDD from which you boot your Windows.
boot into safe mode install a good antivirus like "avira antivir"(free with excelent detedtion rates) and scan your systemif system files are infected and must be deleted then delete themno you either copy deleted system files from another clean machine you haveor just do a repair install of your windowsif the antivirus tells u it can't scan or delete a file then take your hard disk to another machine as slave drive and scan it using the other machine
when it tells you..
I believe it simply tells you what drive you are in. Such as C drive or D Drive.
it checks for errors or defects on your hard drive and tells the computer not to write there anymore
the short answer is no. but you could create a partitioned hard drive (called Bootcamp) with the newest Mac OS (it tells you easily how to do this) and load a copy of Windows 7 into it. When you start up your Mac you have the option of going into normal "Mac mode" or into Windows. Once there, install the game as normal.
It Must Be That The Disk Or Media Is Corrupted.