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Originally Posted by AthrunZala32
toxico, im having a major problem here.
Im running windows vista.
I did what u told me to.Creating a partition named X (1GB) and installing HPQPDP. When the setup is completed i restarted the computer. It didnt boot into windows or quickplay, instead it went to System Recovery Options page.
Please help me.really.Is the computer booting into X?
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O.O
I'm really sorry to have left you hanging for a few days with something this serious! I got rear-ended on the way to work the other day and have been laid up.
If it's booting to the system recovery screen it's certainly not booting to the correct partition. What SHOULD happen after restart is that the machine will boot to the Quickplay partition, X:, and finish up installation.
Best guess here is that the partition you created for Quickplay is not the last partition on the drive. It has to be in order for the install to work, because your boot record is changed temporarily to boot off of the last partition.
Will the system boot to the recovery options no matter what you press? By that I mean, does it do the same thing whether or not you use the power button or the Quickplay buttons?
If that's the case, you may be in for some complication. Two things to try first:
- First, try the easy way: When the machine is booting, keep hitting F8 to see if you get the boot menu. This way you might be able to restore a good configuration, boot Vista in Safe Mode or at least boot to a comand prompt. If you can only do one of the last two, see below the next point for info on editing the boot information.
- I'm not terribly familiar with the recovery options as I've never used them personally, but you should have an option to try and repair Windows (Startup Repair). You might try that; it might fix your boot information for you as that's part of what it is designed to do. You can also try System Restore from the recovery options if this doesn't work.
Ultimately, if the recovery options don't fix your boot info or you can't load a previous config from the boot menu, you'll need to get access to the C: drive and edit the boot information yourself to make C: your primary boot partition again. You can use BCDEdit.exe to do this, but if you can't boot into Vista it won't be easy to run it. Some links to information on this are below; in the Microsoft article, the meat of what you will need to do will be under "8. Change the default boot entry." Ignore the steps about enabling debugging because they don't apply. Definitely look over the whole article, though, so you know what you're getting into.
Here is the article:
http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/driver...bug_vista.mspx
There's no easy way to make a boot disk for Vista, unless you can get to another Vista machine. Here are some instructions:
http://www.windowsbbs.com/showthread.php?t=55427
Note that the article talks about a floppy disk; you'll be using a CD instead.
You can also try something like VistaBootPRO, though I cannot vouch for its effectiveness in your situation:
http://www.pro-networks.org/vistabootpro/intro.php
Whatever method you use, the first thing you want to do when you can boot back into Vista is go back to Disk Management and get rid of that Quickplay partition you made! This will at least take you back to square one.
Assuming that my initial guess is the problem, once you get back to booting into Vista the only ways to get that 1GB partition to be the last one on the drive will be:
a) Somehow shrink the recovery partition by 1GB so the free space is at the end of the drive - I do not know if this can be done;
b) Delete the recovery partition so that there is no other partition after your boot partition. If you're going to go this route, CREATE YOUR RECOVERY CDs FIRST; or
c) Use a different application capable of moving partitions. Partition Magic Pro could do it easily in XP, but I'd hesitate to use it in Vista. I've gotten version 8.0 working with Vista but haven't used it to modify any partitions for fear of error.
Logically speaking, you probably shrunk your Vista partition, which is the first partition on the drive, and created the X: partition out of the free space after this, which sticks X: in between the first partition and the previously second partition, which is usually the recovery partition. This is not good, because the X: partition that Quickplay will use HAS to be the last one on the drive, like so:

This is my hard drive as shown by Disk Management. C: is my Vista boot partition, D: is just a partition I have for storing install files for applications and whatnot, and the unnamed 1.00 GB partition is what you have after Quickplay installs properly. Note that I don't have the recovery partition anymore, because I deleted it.
I hope my rambling here helps you. Please let me know. I will keep trying to help if this doesn't do it.