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So here is the story, I recently shutdown my Windows 7 Laptop manually because it was not responding. Now when I load up the computer it takes an extreamly long time to get to the Login screen(aprx. 15min) when normally it is instant. Once there I try logging into the account and I am still waiting from a response from that.

I cannot boot from the disk because there was no disk that came with the Windows 7 laptop. I have no idea what to do please help.

Jake

asked Aug 28 '10 at 21:21

xxjakeoxx98's gravatar image

xxjakeoxx98
17911

what make is the lapopt

(Aug 30 '10 at 04:20) Tim Fontana Tim%20Fontana's gravatar image

Try the diagnostic tools that are built into Windows 7. When your booting into the BIOS I think if you press f8 or something it will give you the option to boot into the built-in diagnostic tools.

answered Aug 28 '10 at 21:50

FilipinoPower's gravatar image

FilipinoPower
13.0k137219313

F8 will normally get you into Safe Mode, which would only really allow you to disable any services or uninstall hardware that might otherwise be stopping you from booting into Windows normally.

The function key for BIOS changes from manufacturer to manufacturer.

(Sep 01 '10 at 13:07) djmoore711 djmoore711's gravatar image

If you can still boot into windows, you should be able to make yourself a recovery disk. If not, you can download a copy from here = http://neosmart.net/blog/2009/windows-7-system-repair-discs/

If you click o the Start orb for the menu, type "create" in the search box then select "Create a system repair disk", then just follow the prompts.

answered Aug 30 '10 at 03:09

Geenome's gravatar image

Geenome
2.3k415072

It sounds as if he can't fully get into Windows.

Once there I try logging into the account and I am still waiting from a response from that.
(Sep 01 '10 at 13:07) djmoore711 djmoore711's gravatar image

Who manufactured your computer? Dell? HP? Sony? Toshiba? Acer?

You do need to repair Windows with a recovery disc. Your best bet is to download the file Geenome mentioned at another computer, or order a disc from your manufacturer. You could also try putting the laptop HDD in a desktop, and scan it for bad sectors that might be corrupting part of your bootup.

If you have a copy laying around, or $89 burning a hole in your pocket, you could pick up a copy of SpinRite 6 and try to repair the file system with it. If that works, you still need to immediately check for Disk Errors in Windows once it boots back in.

answered Sep 01 '10 at 14:24

djmoore711's gravatar image

djmoore711
2.0k223454

if i had $89 dollars, i would buy a new copy of windows O_o

(Sep 01 '10 at 14:32) Tim Fontana Tim%20Fontana's gravatar image
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Asked: Aug 28 '10 at 21:21

Seen: 2,834 times

Last updated: Sep 01 '10 at 14:32