I dug up my old laptop (HP Pavilion with i7, Radeon graphics card (no idea what exactly) and Windows 7) because I wanted to see if I could solve the problem. Here is the problem description:
When booting the PC, I'm asked for startup options (start Windows normally / start jumpstart). When I start Windows normally flashes a blue screen shortly and the PC restarts, so I go back to the startup options. With the 2.Option opens the console (X: \ windows \ system32 \ cmd.exe) and I have to restart the PC manually (can't type anything in cmd).
What I already tried:
I pressed F8 while booting to continue booting options. There I tried all options to execute, which all lead to the described blue screen.
Since I did not have the necessary tools or a replacement hard disk, I could not replace them, and I'm actually not sure if that's because. In addition, I do not know much about operating systems, so I wanted to ask if there are any hopes to get the PC up and running.
I like to answer questions.
If you press F8 at the start, there should also be a point, similar to "prevent restart". The turns off the blue screen, the immediate restart. At the next blue screen he shows you the bottom left the error message to something like 0x00000xxxx.
Would be good if you could call us this.
It would be good if you can comb into the BIOS and check whether time and date are up to date.
Firstly, thank you for your answer! So here's the following:
STOP: 0x000000ED (0xFFFFFA8006CA1CD0,0xFFFFFFFFC00000B5, …). In the 3 points in the bracket is the whole two times with just 0ern there
Read through, but suspect that the hard drive slowly blesses their temporal.
To test the hard disk, there are programs that start from CD / DVD.
Where I like to work is the emergency DVD of computer image, the ISO download and burn to DVD. Is Linux based and has many tools on board.
https://www.borncity.com/blog/2014/10/18/windows-fehler-0x000000ed-unmountable-boot-volum
So it actually seems to be on the hard drive. Thank you, I'll see what else I can do.
By the way, I actually got into the BIOS. Date is still current, not the time (According to calculator, it is currently 1:20). Is it possible to find out something about the BIOS, or is a hard disk exchange necessary?
Could in the settings of the hard drive to check again, if you something strange and possibly in the boot devices - HDD on First boot.
Otherwise check hard disk, you can expand, should be SATA, you can connect to a normal computer and check there.
Removal instructions here on youtube:
https://www.youtube.com/...+ausbauen+