I totally screwed up my friend's 64 bit Vista Home Premium tower. We were over there socially and she mentioned that she was having some computer problems. They were minor issues and after I was finished I (very stupidly) mentioned that she likes internet explorer, she should really update her browser to IE9.
Next thing I knew I'm up to my elbows in problems. She only had SP1 and IE9 wouldn't install unless she had SP2, so I download and installed it. After it completed the computer rebooted itself and we saw it go through the 'installing updates' screen, with it finally hitting 100%. After that, a series of little one line items displayed on the now black screen. It looked pretty normal, and I told my friend it'd be done soon. Finally it hit the item displayed in the title of this thread - !! 0xc0190036 !! 1343/87277 faultrep.dll.
And it just stayed there. As minute after embarrassing minute went by I could feel her glaring at me behind my back. After 15 minutes I mercifully held in the power button, and told her it would certainly boot normally. I knew I was lying through my teeth.
It looked okay at first, but then began the series of one line displays, stopping again at the title item.
I had to take her tower home, but assumed that a quick 'Repair your computer' would do the trick. It never went beyond the splash screen. Then to my amazement, I discovered that with all the computers we have in our house, I do not have a single disk of 64 bit Vista. Every 32 bit Vista CD gave me an 'incompatibility' error when I would attempt repairs. Ditto for my Spotmau Bootsuite disk.
I'm going through the steps in this link http://www.vistax64.com/tutorials/301852-vista-iso-download-create-installation-dvd-usb.html but I've got a bad feeling about it. I've already been downloading the install.wim component for 3 hours and my laptop says that I've still got 8 hours and 28 minutes to go. Or so it says - when I started downloading that item it said it would take 7 hours and 10 minutes. Does not leave me with a good feeling.
She desperately needs this computer and the software on it to connect to her job.
It won't boot in safe mode or last good config. At this point I'd be thrilled if I could just somehow get to a system restore screen. (every time I look at the downloads page, the time remaining for install.wim has risen - it's now up to 8:58 for this 3.33GB file. No, now it's 9:05. This sucker will never finish)
*** Update ***
Well, the sucker DID finish and I was able to follow the (slightly) convoluted instructions and actually got a Vista 64 bit SP1 iso image installed on a 4GB flash drive. And when I used it to boot I got no compatibility errors. That's the good news. The bad is that it initiated a startup repair which has now been running for just under 4 hours. And of course, it can't be canceled. And of course, I can't get to the command prompt or system restore options until this completes. Do you think Bill Gates' favorite book is Catch 22?
*** Another Update ***
It's now been chugging away on the Startup Repair screen for 2 days. It's tough to know what will happen first:
1. Somebody will actually respond to the topic and give a helpful suggestion
2. The Repair screen will finally end and I'll be presented with the Advanced Repair options
3. My former friend will sue me for the price of a new computer
I'm leaning toward door number 3....
Next thing I knew I'm up to my elbows in problems. She only had SP1 and IE9 wouldn't install unless she had SP2, so I download and installed it. After it completed the computer rebooted itself and we saw it go through the 'installing updates' screen, with it finally hitting 100%. After that, a series of little one line items displayed on the now black screen. It looked pretty normal, and I told my friend it'd be done soon. Finally it hit the item displayed in the title of this thread - !! 0xc0190036 !! 1343/87277 faultrep.dll.
And it just stayed there. As minute after embarrassing minute went by I could feel her glaring at me behind my back. After 15 minutes I mercifully held in the power button, and told her it would certainly boot normally. I knew I was lying through my teeth.
It looked okay at first, but then began the series of one line displays, stopping again at the title item.
I had to take her tower home, but assumed that a quick 'Repair your computer' would do the trick. It never went beyond the splash screen. Then to my amazement, I discovered that with all the computers we have in our house, I do not have a single disk of 64 bit Vista. Every 32 bit Vista CD gave me an 'incompatibility' error when I would attempt repairs. Ditto for my Spotmau Bootsuite disk.
I'm going through the steps in this link http://www.vistax64.com/tutorials/301852-vista-iso-download-create-installation-dvd-usb.html but I've got a bad feeling about it. I've already been downloading the install.wim component for 3 hours and my laptop says that I've still got 8 hours and 28 minutes to go. Or so it says - when I started downloading that item it said it would take 7 hours and 10 minutes. Does not leave me with a good feeling.
She desperately needs this computer and the software on it to connect to her job.
It won't boot in safe mode or last good config. At this point I'd be thrilled if I could just somehow get to a system restore screen. (every time I look at the downloads page, the time remaining for install.wim has risen - it's now up to 8:58 for this 3.33GB file. No, now it's 9:05. This sucker will never finish)
*** Update ***
Well, the sucker DID finish and I was able to follow the (slightly) convoluted instructions and actually got a Vista 64 bit SP1 iso image installed on a 4GB flash drive. And when I used it to boot I got no compatibility errors. That's the good news. The bad is that it initiated a startup repair which has now been running for just under 4 hours. And of course, it can't be canceled. And of course, I can't get to the command prompt or system restore options until this completes. Do you think Bill Gates' favorite book is Catch 22?
*** Another Update ***
It's now been chugging away on the Startup Repair screen for 2 days. It's tough to know what will happen first:
1. Somebody will actually respond to the topic and give a helpful suggestion
2. The Repair screen will finally end and I'll be presented with the Advanced Repair options
3. My former friend will sue me for the price of a new computer
I'm leaning toward door number 3....
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