If you see a blue screen before this happens then either there is a problem with the Disc Drives, I/O and your Operating system doesn't agree, or the disk you are using is causing a problem with the operating system.
It may also be a power supply problem as the drive may be trying to use power but may not have enough and by default the motherboard will shutdown the computer in an attempt to save itself from a shortage of overload.
Other than these above I cannot give you anymore without being there or having more detailed information.
well mostly you reboot your computer when it seems not to work
It allows the computer to reboot.
you broke it
simaltaneously press Ctrl+alt+delete your computer will reboot
Gavin Blair has: Played Game Announcer in "ReBoot" in 1994. Played Computer Voice in "ReBoot" in 1994. Played Binky in "ReBoot" in 1994. Played Computer in "ReBoot" in 1994. Played Binky in "ReBoot: My Two Bobs" in 2001.
To reboot your computer from another computer, you will need to install a program that allows you to remotely access your computer. Once you have installed this and given the program access to your computer, you can follow the commands to reboot
Reboot is computer talk for turn off the computer and turn it back on. It helps reset the memory and other processes.
YES,yes it does
Rebooting your computer in safe mode is a good idea if you suspect a virus or your computer is running slow. To find out how to reboot check out Microsoft.
When you reboot your computer, your computer restarts, or starts again. This is just like restarting your computer.
The same as with pretty much any other Linux distribution available.As root or superuser do one of the following:To initiate an immediate reboot:# /sbin/reboot To shut down system and poweroff:# /sbin/poweroff To have the machine reboot itself in 37 minutes thus giving me time to log off and drive to my girlfriend's house before the reboot:# echo "/sbin/reboot"|at now + 37 min # exit NOTE: The above assumes the atd daemon is running on the system of course.The above lists only three (3) of the possible reboot techniques, root can improvise nearly as many other possible scenarios as the imagination is capable of producing. You could configure it to reboot whenever a specific user logs in, or reboot whenever a particular program is executed or reboot whenever some particular file is opened and so on nearly ad infinitum...
how do you verify your email address it may be because you have a virus, or the computer froze up. just reboot, or run a virus scan, and try again