Windows xp fresh install will not update


















Otherwise the problem seems unrelated since you switched to different hard drive and cd drive. Except, there's a driver issue. And by "constantly rebooting" you mean the machine started a new reboot after POST or during logon screen? There's always the possibility that a second piece of hardware is faulty, but let's assume this is not the case I can get to the bios and have checked all settings several times.

I am not overclocking. I do not even get to the log on screen because windows will not install. I am performing a clean install. Sometimes there is no reason listed when it says that windows must shut down. What unnecessary hardware is hooked up that can be removed USB devices, printer, scanner, etc Is your mouse usb or ps Remove it and use the keyboard to walk though all menus I will keep looking for another explaination It's funny you mentioned the logitech mouse because I normally use that, but for troubleshooting purposes, I am using a regualr one.

I am still attempting to do a fresh install, as we speak Does it recognize correctly? One thing I could have imagined is that you get the same error on all 3 disks, because the read error happened with the first one and you only tried to repair with the other two, which might not work for whatever reason.

But if I understand it correctly you were now doing another clean install from the other two disks, is that right? And "clean" means, into a formatted partition, I guess. Probably try a different format mode, although I can't imagine that to be a problem. See this page about STOP errors and follow the link to the Microsoft article But I guess you get lots of different bluescreens and that might not match your case. You should probably try to boot bare-bones with only the necessary components if you didn't do that already.

No, cd rom is not on the same ide. I checked and the mobo recognizes the processer. I would bet on the cable or perhaps even the IDE controller, although that one probably won't break all of a sudden. Since your hard drives shouldn't both be broken the cable is your best bet and you can easily change that. There isn't an error message about your IDE cable at boot-up, is there?

Now I get Stop 0x HOw do I do this?? Yeah, page fault yada yada. I am able to install automatically now, but would still like to be able to manually install.

Important: One of the normal steps in eliminating malicious programs is to entirely delete the contents of all Temp folders. Sometimes, anti virus programs are not truly disabled when we disable them as they have very deep hooks into the operating system. This thread is locked. You can follow the question or vote as helpful, but you cannot reply to this thread. I have the same question 1. Report abuse. Details required :. Cancel Submit.

Ravinath P. Hi Jerry, Thank you for posting the question on Microsoft Community. However, we need more information about the issue to assist you better. Please help me answer these questions. Which service pack is installed?

What is the error message or error code? I have a couple of steps which should assist you to fix this issue. You need to identify the updates with the issue. You may download Windows XP Service pack 3 using the link. Method 1: Note: Important this section, method, or task contains steps that tell you how to modify the registry. Make sure you back up the data on the computer before proceeding further. How satisfied are you with this reply?

So have a look at WSUS offline. You can burn ISO or copy all updates onto a flash drive and install them in one click. Go for WSUS; it will automatically push the updates and user can simply re-start the system when asked for :D.

Although you should have a base image you should be working off of. If you are reinstalling by hand, that's gonna take a long time versus the 10 minutes for laying down an image and running a few updates. Both can be setup on a local machine with some customization, and rebuilt with added patches, fixes, and updates as appropriate. MDT is useful in being a lead-in to System Center a good skill to have , however it does have a steeper learning curve.

As an example useful MS how-to links can be:. May want to download these videos for perusal on your media viewing device phone, tablet, etc. I tend to run all the hardware until it's basically useless still running Dimension 's in our warehouses and buy new machines in bulk, so I tend to build a specific 'generic' machine as required then I use CloneZilla in LiveUSB mode off a portable 1TB drive to image and deploy machines.

You can slipstream the patches onto the installation disk so they are already there after you complete the install. It's called Powersuite by Spotmau. Here is the link. We have Dell systems at our locations and I have an image of each once to get things back up and running asap.

The free version is very handy for applying Windows Updates with minimal interaction. The automatic updates are almost dead on windows xp seeing as they are no longer supported. All you get is the generic security update. So all you should realistically need to do is download service pack 3 and install. Then the automatic updates take wind after that and it should be pretty quick.

I have a disc that has SP3 and some of the updates slipstreamed, have you made one of those? It's basically just the vanilla XP or whatever install with the hotfixes already installed. Also, check this out, it might come in handy. No the easiest application to use but once you have it setup it makes life a lot simpler for managing you network as well as creating and deploying images. I am sure there are other imaging application out there that are capable of hardware independent images SCCM is just the one I am familiar with, but to sum up what you need is software that is capable of preforming said image then it is just a case of creating the original image installing the patches and software that is needed and deploy.



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