You may have a manufacturers screen displayed that hides what is going on in
the background. When I work on a computer, one of the first things I do is
go into the bios and turn off this screen. The boot information is very
important and is quite useful in trouble shooting a misbehaving system.
--
Regards,
Richard Urban
Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User
(For email, remove the obvious from my address)
"Tom" <Tom@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:2ED5DA50-E873-4252-B6A5-932A1E477C21@microsoft.com...
> Thanks Richard. I figured out how to do that and finally got all the
> message
> you told me I'd get (=> choose Y if you want to check after next restart)
>
> However, I just restarted and it didn't do anything. No checking
> whatsoever
> (unless it's checking in the background).
>
> "Richard Urban" wrote:
>
>> As I said, you have to open a command prompt with administrator
>> privileges
>> (elevated mode).
>>
>> --
>>
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> Richard Urban
>> Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User
>> (For email, remove the obvious from my address)
>>
>>
>>
>> "Tom" <Tom@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
>> news:916DEADE-2F10-4CE1-9A45-434D29A54F8E@microsoft.com...
>> > Thanks Richard. One more question. I just tried that and even though
>> > I'm
>> > an
>> > administrator on my computer (and I just doublechecked) I get the
>> > following
>> > message when I use the comand prompt:
>> > "Access denied as you do not have sufficient priviliges. You have to
>> > invoke
>> > this utility running in elevated mode."
>> >
>> > Sorry but I'm not that compter savy? Is the such a thing as a
>> > "Uber"-administrator that I need to be?
>> >
>> > Thanks again for the quick response.
>> >
>> > "Richard Urban" wrote:
>> >
>> >> Open a command prompt window with administrator privileges.
>> >>
>> >> Type chkdsk c: /f in the window.
>> >>
>> >> Press enter.
>> >>
>> >> System is locked. Do you want to check next time you reboot? Type Y
>> >> and
>> >> press enter.
>> >>
>> >> Close window.
>> >>
>> >> Reboot.
>> >>
>> >> chkdsk will run on drive C:
>> >>
>> >> --
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> Regards,
>> >>
>> >> Richard Urban
>> >> Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User
>> >> (For email, remove the obvious from my address)
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> "Tom" <Tom@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
>> >> news:76A9DEF4-4ED3-42B2-9475-FBEEF84335E4@microsoft.com...
>> >> >I got a new PC with preinstalled Vista Ultimate (32-bit). I'm trying
>> >> >to
>> >> > backup my system to a DVD but get various error messages.
>> >> >
>> >> > 1st message ==> "Windows has detected file system corruption on C:
>> >> > You
>> >> > must
>> >> > check the disk for errors before it can be restored."
>> >> >
>> >> > When I try to check the disk, I get another message ==> "Windows
>> >> > can't
>> >> > check
>> >> > the disk while it is in use. Do you want to check for hard disk
>> >> > errors
>> >> > the
>> >> > next time you start your computer?" (BTW: no other program was
>> >> > running
>> >> > unless
>> >> > I had something running in the background that I wasn't aware off)
>> >> >
>> >> > I tried to do that but the next time I restarted the computer, I
>> >> > don't
>> >> > think
>> >> > there was any HD checking going on (at least I didn't get a
>> >> > message).
>> >> >
>> >> > Any suggestions?
>> >> > Thanks,
>> >> > Tom
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >>
>> >>
>>
>>