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Apple Computing Products:
Running Windows on your Mac
Bootcamp Running Windows 7 (32bit) will randomly not startup, and randomly start up!
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<blockquote data-quote="cwa107" data-source="post: 1371758" data-attributes="member: 24098"><p>I've noticed that at times - particularly during boot up after a Windows update - Win7 will sort of "hang" at a black screen. On a regular PC, you would just leave it alone because you'd see the flashing hard disk light and that the power light is on. Of course, Macs don't have those kinds of indicators, so it just looks like nothing is happening and you hard power it down.</p><p></p><p>The trouble is, hard powering it down can cause corruption in the file system, making it even worse the next time you go to boot Windows 7. And of course, subsequently forcing it to power down can exacerbate the problem.</p><p></p><p>The thing to do if this happens is to *let it sit for a minute* before you manually intervene. And of course, now that you have a problem, you should probably run a Disk Check within Windows. The next time you go to start it up and it actually comes up, do the following:</p><p></p><p>1. Click the Start menu and go to Programs => Accessories</p><p>2. Right-click on Command Prompt and choose "Run as administrator"</p><p>3. Type the following command into the prompt:</p><p></p><p>chkdsk c: /R</p><p></p><p>4. It will tell you it needs to reboot to run CHKDSK. Do so now, and be sure to start in Windows.</p><p>5. It will take a while to run the disk check, but let it proceed and it should find and correct any errors.</p><p>6. The next time it boots slowly, just let it sit for a minute or two before you hard power it down.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cwa107, post: 1371758, member: 24098"] I've noticed that at times - particularly during boot up after a Windows update - Win7 will sort of "hang" at a black screen. On a regular PC, you would just leave it alone because you'd see the flashing hard disk light and that the power light is on. Of course, Macs don't have those kinds of indicators, so it just looks like nothing is happening and you hard power it down. The trouble is, hard powering it down can cause corruption in the file system, making it even worse the next time you go to boot Windows 7. And of course, subsequently forcing it to power down can exacerbate the problem. The thing to do if this happens is to *let it sit for a minute* before you manually intervene. And of course, now that you have a problem, you should probably run a Disk Check within Windows. The next time you go to start it up and it actually comes up, do the following: 1. Click the Start menu and go to Programs => Accessories 2. Right-click on Command Prompt and choose "Run as administrator" 3. Type the following command into the prompt: chkdsk c: /R 4. It will tell you it needs to reboot to run CHKDSK. Do so now, and be sure to start in Windows. 5. It will take a while to run the disk check, but let it proceed and it should find and correct any errors. 6. The next time it boots slowly, just let it sit for a minute or two before you hard power it down. [/QUOTE]
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Apple Computing Products:
Running Windows on your Mac
Bootcamp Running Windows 7 (32bit) will randomly not startup, and randomly start up!
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