Windows XP has stopped working properly

S

stuartcorey

I have a problem with my computer that's driving me nuts.

Yesterday I turned on my PC and began using it as normal. Suddenly I had a
message appear saying that shutdown would occur in 60 seconds and a countdown
timer appeared. After the computer shutdown, I restarted but have had
problems ever since. The desktop bar at the bottom of the screen has turned
grey and only certain programs appear in the bottom right corner. The
internet has stopped working - Firefox will open but say it cannot connect
and if I click on IE I get asked what program I want to open it with. As for
the other programs on the computer, some open and others simply do nothing if
I click on them. I also cannot copy and paste anymore in Windows or drag
files between folders. I have tried system restore but this does not work -
I get a message saying "System Restore is not able to protect your computer".

I have looked on the Event Viewer and at roughly the time the original
shutdown message occurred there were 2 errors: EventSystem 4609 and VSS 8193.
Clicking on these or selecting Properties achieves nothing so I have no more
info.

Also, the sounds and videos are not working.

All in all, the computer is having a few problems! If anyone could help
that would be great!

I'm using Windows XP Home Edition v.5.1 SP3 on a Dell Dimesion 3000. 30GB
hard drive and 2GB RAM.

I've run a number of virus checkers (only about half will open) and none of
them have found anything.
 
S

Shenan Stanley

stuartcorey said:
I have a problem with my computer that's driving me nuts.

Yesterday I turned on my PC and began using it as normal. Suddenly
I had a message appear saying that shutdown would occur in 60
seconds and a countdown timer appeared. After the computer
shutdown, I restarted but have had problems ever since. The
desktop bar at the bottom of the screen has turned grey and only
certain programs appear in the bottom right corner. The internet
has stopped working - Firefox will open but say it cannot connect
and if I click on IE I get asked what program I want to open it
with. As for the other programs on the computer, some open and
others simply do nothing if I click on them. I also cannot copy
and paste anymore in Windows or drag files between folders. I have
tried system restore but this does not work - I get a message
saying "System Restore is not able to protect your computer".

I have looked on the Event Viewer and at roughly the time the
original shutdown message occurred there were 2 errors: EventSystem
4609 and VSS 8193. Clicking on these or selecting Properties
achieves nothing so I have no more info.

Also, the sounds and videos are not working.

All in all, the computer is having a few problems! If anyone could
help that would be great!

I'm using Windows XP Home Edition v.5.1 SP3 on a Dell Dimesion
3000. 30GB hard drive and 2GB RAM.

I've run a number of virus checkers (only about half will open) and
none of them have found anything.

Few possibilities, really. Here's what I would do - in order.

It does seem long - but it will eliminate a lot of possible issues that may
have been causing your computer to be slower than it should have been all
this time and fix all sorts of issues.

Reboot so you start with a fresh machine. For everything here you will
need to logon as an user with administrative (installation) priviledges.

Fix your file/registry permissions...

Ignore the title and follow the sub-section under
"Advanced Troubleshooting" titled,
"Method 1: Reset the registry and the file permissions"
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/949377
*will take time
** Ignore the last step (6) - you'll said you have SP3 already...

You will likely see errors pass by if you watching, even count up. No
worries *at this time*.

*After* that is done, continue on to the next part where you clean off
some excess (unnecessary) files. It only removes those you definitely
do not need, if you follow the directions *as given* and do not deviate.
So reboot (for each of these steps, it is just best to reboot right
before - but I will continue to point that out) and logon as an user with
administrative priviledges.

Download/install the "Windows Installer CleanUp Utility":
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/290301

After installing, do the following:

Start button --> RUN
(no "RUN"? Press the "Windows Key" + R on your keyboard)
--> type in:
"%ProgramFiles%\Windows Installer Clean Up\msizap.exe" g!
--> Click OK.
(The quotation marks and percentage signs and spacing should be exact.)

It will flash by *quick*, don't expect much out of this step to get
excited about. But the cleaner your machine is to start with, the
better your luck will be later (not really luck - more like preparedness,
but that's not as fun to think about, eh?)

Yeah - you will get tired of rebooting - but let's soldier on and reboot
again and logon as an user with administrative priviledges.

This time (and this is one of the more time-consuming steps) you will be
running (one at a time with reboots in-between each) three different
anti-spyware/anti-malware applications to ensure you come up clean.

Download, install, run, update and perform a full scan with the following
(freeware version):

SuperAntiSpyware
http://www.superantispyware.com/

Reboot and logon as administrative user.

Download, install, run, update and perform a full scan with the following
(freeware version):

MalwareBytes
http://www.malwarebytes.com/

Reboot and logon as administrative user.

Download and run the MSRT manually:
http://www.microsoft.com/security/malwareremove/default.mspx

You may find nothing, you may find only cookies, you may think it is a
waste of time - but if you do all this and report back here with what you
do/don't find as you are doing all of it - you are adding more pieces to
the puzzle and the entire picture just may become clearer and your
problem resolved.

Reboot and logon as administrative user.

Download/Install the latest Windows Installer (for your OS):
( Windows XP 32-bit : WindowsXP-KB942288-v3-x86.exe )
http://www.microsoft.com/downloadS/...6F-60B6-4412-95B9-54D056D6F9F4&displaylang=en

Reboot and logon as administrative user.

Download the latest version of the Windows Update agent from here (x86):
http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=91237
.... and save it to the root of your C:\ drive. After saving it to the
root of the C:\ drive, do the following:

Close all Internet Explorer windows and other applications.

Start button --> RUN and type in:
%SystemDrive%\windowsupdateagent30-x86.exe /WUFORCE
--> Click OK.

(If asked, select "Run.) --> Click on NEXT --> Select "I agree" and click on
NEXT --> When it finishes installing, click on "Finish"...

Reboot and logon as administrative user.

Visit this web page:

How do I reset Windows Update components?
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/971058

.... and click on the "Microsoft Fix it" icon. When asked, select "RUN",
both times. Check the "I agree" box and click on "Next". Check the box
for "Run aggressive options (not recommended)" and click "Next". Let
it finish up and follow the prompts until it is done. Close/exit and
reboot when it is.

You should now perform a full CHKDSK on your system drive (C:)...

How to scan your disks for errors
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/315265
* will take time and a reboot

You should now perform a full Defragment on your system drive (C:)...

How to Defragment your hard drives
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314848
* will take time

Uninstall any and all third-party firewall applications (ZoneAlarm, etc)
and utilize the built-in WIndows Firewall only.

Reboot and logon as administrative user, open Internet Explorer
and visit http://windowsupdate.microsoft.com/ and select to do a
CUSTOM scan...

Every time you are about to click on something while at these web pages -
first press and hold down the CTRL key while you click on it. You can
release the CTRL key after clicking each time.

Once the scan is done, select just _ONE_ of the high priority updates
(deselect any others) and install it.

Reboot again.

If it did work - try the web page again - selecting no more than 3-5 at a
time. Rebooting as needed.

The Optional Software updates are generally safe - although I recommend
against the "Windows Search" one and any of the "Office Live" ones or
"Windows Live" ones for now. I would completely avoid the
Optional Hardware updates. Also - I do not see any urgent need to
install Internet Explorer 8 at this time.

Seriously - do all that. This is like antibiotics - don't skip a single
step, don't quit because you think things will be okay now - go through
until the end, until you have done everything given in the order given. If
you have a problem with a step come ask and let someone here get you
through that step. If you don't understand how to do a step, come back
and ask here about that step and let someone walk you through it.

Then - when done - let everyone here know if it worked for you - or if
you have more issues.
 
C

champ to chump

I had the exact same problem....At first I thought it was a hardware problem
but it isn't. What I did to get back is to put in my XP OS disc and do a new
install. Part way into this is an option to repair the operating system by
selecting 'R'. This preserves all the installed programs vs. a brand new
install.

I'm not fully back but I have verified that my USB ports, network ports,
etc. are all fine (i.e. no hardware failure). I had been away for several
days and this was the first time my computer was on in a week. I have no
idea what caused the corruption but my symptoms were identical to yours....

DH
 

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