September 10, 2009
The Blue Screen of Death comes to us all in time
But sometimes we win. I feel like my little Vaio has cheated death.
So my battery detached from my wonderful Sony VAIO laptop for 2 seconds and it died. DIED. And when I turned her back on, I got the dreaded BSOD (Blue Screen of Death). Except I couldn't see the son of a bitch. It flashed and reloaded.
I could tell from initial googling that the problem required a Windows XP boot disk. Problem 1: Where TF is the boot disk? The laptop didn't come with one, and although I'm sure I made one, I can't find it. And conveniently, MicroHELL only has a FLOPPY DISK download for XP recovery.
But I got one, courtesy of google. Here: http://www.download3000.co m/download-xp-recovery-cd- maker-count-reg-17676.html
Just save the .ZIP file and extract the .ISO file to a CD. VOILA! Boot CD! (make sure you have plenty of blank CDs, I had to make about 4 copies since my laptop wouldn't recognize a CD again once I had popped it out to try to restart)
Ok, so once the boot CD is in the drive, start 'er up. Press any key to boot from CD. I didn't have a BIOS problem booting from CD, but it's possible others might. After the Recovery CD is running, then I loaded the Recovery Console.
I never realized just how much DOS I've forgotten in 15 years. The recovery console is a modified DOS shell.
Anyway, I tried a bunch of things and realized I wasn't loaded into the shell correctly. Crap. Must freeze BSOD. So I looked it up. To freeze the BSOD so you can read it and copy down the error codes, I had to open up the startup options menu (held down F8 at the VAIO logo) and select "Disable Automatic Restart on System Failure".
That was the easiest thing I had to do. Now that I had BSOD stopped, I could read it.
UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_ DEVICE STOP: 0x000000ED (0x8A789030, 0xC0000006, 0x00000000, 0x00000000)
And back to google, which took me to three useful places.
First, here: http://msgoodies.blogspot. com/2007/08/fixing-unmount ablebootvolume-on-windows. html, where the computer in question had an identical error,
and MicroHell: http://support.microsoft.c om/default.aspx?scid=kb;en -us;297185
and finally: http://www.smartcomputing. com/editorial/article.asp? article=articles%2F2006%2F s1712%2F08s12%2F08s12.asp
The last is written for non-geeks. Probably the most useful link.
Based on all of the sites I visited between 9:30 when it fried and 2:30 when it got fixed, I decided to try a solution that was a hybrid of all three suggestions.
First, I ran chkdsk /r on the root directory (c
. After that finished, I basically followed the steps in #3 above.
However, this left me with 3 possible boot choices. Annoying and a mess waiting to happen. So I edited the new and improved boot.ini through Windows once everything else was working.
See here for instructions: http://vlaurie.com/compute rs2/Articles/bootini.htm
And finally, 5 hours later it seems to be working again, no losses. Tomorrow, ASAP, I will be doing a backup session to prevent the heart attack that was imminent for about 3 of those 5 hours.
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So my battery detached from my wonderful Sony VAIO laptop for 2 seconds and it died. DIED. And when I turned her back on, I got the dreaded BSOD (Blue Screen of Death). Except I couldn't see the son of a bitch. It flashed and reloaded.
I could tell from initial googling that the problem required a Windows XP boot disk. Problem 1: Where TF is the boot disk? The laptop didn't come with one, and although I'm sure I made one, I can't find it. And conveniently, MicroHELL only has a FLOPPY DISK download for XP recovery.
But I got one, courtesy of google. Here: http://www.download3000.co
Just save the .ZIP file and extract the .ISO file to a CD. VOILA! Boot CD! (make sure you have plenty of blank CDs, I had to make about 4 copies since my laptop wouldn't recognize a CD again once I had popped it out to try to restart)
Ok, so once the boot CD is in the drive, start 'er up. Press any key to boot from CD. I didn't have a BIOS problem booting from CD, but it's possible others might. After the Recovery CD is running, then I loaded the Recovery Console.
I never realized just how much DOS I've forgotten in 15 years. The recovery console is a modified DOS shell.
Anyway, I tried a bunch of things and realized I wasn't loaded into the shell correctly. Crap. Must freeze BSOD. So I looked it up. To freeze the BSOD so you can read it and copy down the error codes, I had to open up the startup options menu (held down F8 at the VAIO logo) and select "Disable Automatic Restart on System Failure".
That was the easiest thing I had to do. Now that I had BSOD stopped, I could read it.
UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_ DEVICE STOP: 0x000000ED (0x8A789030, 0xC0000006, 0x00000000, 0x00000000)
And back to google, which took me to three useful places.
First, here: http://msgoodies.blogspot.
and MicroHell: http://support.microsoft.c
and finally: http://www.smartcomputing.
The last is written for non-geeks. Probably the most useful link.
Based on all of the sites I visited between 9:30 when it fried and 2:30 when it got fixed, I decided to try a solution that was a hybrid of all three suggestions.
First, I ran chkdsk /r on the root directory (c
However, this left me with 3 possible boot choices. Annoying and a mess waiting to happen. So I edited the new and improved boot.ini through Windows once everything else was working.
See here for instructions: http://vlaurie.com/compute
And finally, 5 hours later it seems to be working again, no losses. Tomorrow, ASAP, I will be doing a backup session to prevent the heart attack that was imminent for about 3 of those 5 hours.

Posted by: caltechgirl at
02:17 AM
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1
I would have had that heart attack.
Posted by: Theresa at September 10, 2009 05:08 AM (QfUNq)
2
So it's not the news for me,personally, but some years ago it was so and there was noone to help me with that problem.
Great tips for a novice!
Posted by: Markus from Poland at October 10, 2009 10:03 AM (jySWp)
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