In news:hvugo5l7k9ram674mmg0dfmabr2k4tu641@4ax.com,
mm typed:
> On Sat, 27 Feb 2010 01:48:20 -0000, "ybS2okj"
> wrote:
>
>> Why are you giving three-fingered salute to your computer (aka
>> Ctrl-Alt-Del) and at what stage are you doing this?
>
> I have a friend with a win2000 computer that comes up with a small box
> that requires either login info or iirc if there is none,
> cntl-alt-delete to get to the next step.
>
> He was given the computer by someone who was given the computer at
> work, when they upgraded, so login was important or at least enabled.
>
> Does XP ever have anything like that?
>
>
>>
>> If you are trying at the welcome screen then you need to do it twice
>> to get manual input of various usernames. However, if you are doing
>> it when you have already logged in then clearly you have a very
>> serious problem.
>>
>> Please advise us further before a drastic solution is given.
>>
>> hth
>>
>> "mikelee101" wrote in message
>> news:3A7F9E6B-7E0F-4549-AF24-55B2CE74292C@microsoft.com...
>>> I have a desktop running WinXP Pro. It was running terribly slow,
>>> so I rebooted. When I got to the ctrl-alt-delete prompt, I hit the
>>> keys and nothing happened. I powered off and back on again and
>>> same thing. I rebooted to Last Known Good Configuration, and still
>>> the same thing. Then I
>>> tried a different keyboard. Still nothing happens when you press
>>> ctrl-atl-delete. During the boot process, the lights on the
>>> keyboard (num lock, cap lock, etc) blink, so it appears that the
>>> keyboard and computer are
>>> communicating on some level, at least.
>>> Anyone have any thoughts on anything else I can try?
>>>
>>> Thanks for the help.
>>> --
>>> Mike Lee
>>> McKinney,TX USA
The best thing to do with any new computer that has been used before is to
do a "clean install" of the OS. It'll run faster and be a lot more problem
free than trying to figure out and fix a previous user's settings and
problems and malware infestations.
It will also prove that you have been given the correct discs etc. to do
clean installs and to install any other programs that were provided with it,
for future recoveries when a drive crashes to uselessness, get too infested
to repair, etc. etc. etc..
Otherwise you're going to have to put up with previous users' bad habits,
problems and likely malware if they were anywhere near newbie or even
general user status. By rebuilding it you then only have your own problems
to conetned with and better yet, you know exactly how you set things up.
HTH,
Twayne
--
--
Life is the only real counselor; wisdom unfiltered
through personal experience does not become a
part of the moral tissue.