At Fixya.com, our trusted experts are meticulously vetted and possess extensive experience in their respective fields. Backed by a community of knowledgeable professionals, our platform ensures that the solutions provided are thoroughly researched and validated.
- If you need clarification, ask it in the comment box above.
- Better answers use proper spelling and grammar.
- Provide details, support with references or personal experience.
Tell us some more! Your answer needs to include more details to help people.You can't post answers that contain an email address.Please enter a valid email address.The email address entered is already associated to an account.Login to postPlease use English characters only.
Tip: The max point reward for answering a question is 15.
When windows tries to fire up, does it ask you whether to boot up in safe mode or normal (would be a black and white MS DOS screen with no mouse functions)? If not, you need to reboot your computer and go into boot options. There should be a little comment line in one corner of the screen before windows loads that says something like F2 Setup F12 Boot Menu. Do you get that once it has begun trying to execute windows?
"insufficient system resources exist to complete API." This problem occurs because the Windows kernel power manager cannot
obtain the memory resources that are required to prepare the computer
to hibernate. When you experience this problem, the hibernate feature is not available on the computer until you restart the computer.
This problem typically occurs when the computer uses 1 gigabyte (GB) or more of RAM.
you can fix this problem by downloading hot fix through this link below
In safe mode it does the same reboot reboot thing? Computer messages are not really reliable as far as fault tracing is concerned. The message given is a close as the PC can come to the right one.It sound as though there is a problem reading the hard drive. Try booting from a bootable CDor flash drive if you don't have a floppy drive, and see it if does the same.Can you get into the BIOS setup by pressing delete on bootup?
Shoot it? Yes, this is one solution. Not very cost effective though. (Tempting though, huh? One 12 gauge blast, and.....WAIT! Back to the solution, lol!)
No, I suggest you install the Hotfix from Microsoft instead.
You probably have been hit by a virus that is attacking your Local Security Accounts Windows file and is using all your system resources. You may not be able to perform a system scan to fix this issue do to the lack of system resources. Now if you have another pc with a good and upto date antivirus application you can take the hard drive out of your computer and plug it into that other computer and scan it and remove the infection and while you have it in their go to the command prompt and repair the windows files by typing:
chkdsk E: /r
The E: is the drive letter of your infected drive you will know what this is when you go into my computer.
Also use a spyware program like Adaware that is up to date to scan the drive as well.
This all assumes you want to save the drive, Windows, and all your applications. Now if you don't care about those things then try a system restore to go back to a working point in your computers history.
Otherwise repair mode for windows will work also.
boot your system in safe mode by pressing f8 key repeatedly during the booting process then select safe mode and press enter then go to system restore option, and select system restore, then select some previous date where system is working fine, restore it
how do you like the solution please rate it
×