Hi,
Just a comment. Recurrent blue screens or stop errors in a relatively new
machine are usually indicative of hardware failure, most frequently bad
memory or a faulty motherboard. As it's been less than a year, you should
contact the manufacturer for warranty service, not Microsoft (they only
support retail disks). Scanning for and attempting to repair bad sectors is
unlikely to fix the problem. Not having any supplied disks is not at all
unusual because the system makers frequently provide for a "return to
factory state" image in a recovery partition on the hard drive. Many will
supply a recovery disk for a nominal fee upon request, but you have to ask
the manufacturer for it.
--
Best of Luck,
Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
Windows help -
www.rickrogers.org
My thoughts
http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
"inwilddreams" <> wrote in message
news

6135824-2B7C-4BD3-9BE9-...
>I have had my HP laptop since last Febraury. It came with Windows Vista. I
> have never ever had so many issues with an operating system before.
> Anyway,
> as I am sure many others get, out of nowhere, the blue screen of death
> shows
> up ( the one with all the mumbled crap and at the bottom it says,
> 'Initializing crash dump')
> And then my windows will not start, it asks for the installation CD, or
> call
> the manufacturer. Which is funny because my computer came with NO DISKS.
> However, it did come with a paper that says my computer does not need any
> disks. Ya, good one. When I called up support, they refused to help,
> something about not taking new accounts. When I tried to get email support
> here, they want to charge $59.
> My advice - work out all of the issues and bugs in your new versions of
> operating systems BEFORE releasing them to the public. It would save all
> of
> us a lot of headaches, time and money.
> With that said, this is what worked for me like a charm this last time it
> crashed:
> Go to Start>Computer. Right Click on Local Disk (C). Go to
> Properties>Tools.
> At the top- 'error checking' - 'This option will check the volume for
> errors' - click on 'Check Now'. There are two options. Check the Top box
> first: 'Automatically check for file system errors'. You will have to
> restart
> your computer for it to run. When it is complete, go through the same
> process, only check the second box: 'Scan for and attempt recovery of bad
> sectors'.
>
> Hopefully this helps someone else out there who is equally frustrated as I
> have been.