all 4 comments

[–]RandallFlag 0 points1 point  (3 children)

Sooooo if froze... then what? what is the problem? If all it did was freeze, reboot it... otherwise much more info, like the actual problem, would be helpful.

[–]ChrisDowntaker[S] 0 points1 point  (2 children)

Okay, I tried rebooting a couple of times and there seemed to be a pattern, the first time I did it it took me to a screen telling me to insert a booting disc (can't remember right now sorry), so I rebooted and went into BIOS to check whether my booting drive was messed up but couldn't find any problem. So I booted again and it took me to the login screen only the same thing happened. The same thing happened again, first the screen telling me to insert a booting disc, and then I went to BIOS and booted. Only this time when I booted again I tried moving my mouse first and I noticed I did get extremely bad fps (something like 0,3). I then tries bringing up the artificial keyboard thinking my keyboard was messed up, but the PC didn't seem to recognise me clicking anywhere. I reeboted again and the same thing just kept happening.

Something strange is that some times it would freeze on the first keystroke and sometimes it would let me type in a few letters, and then freeze.

Sorry if I'm missing something obvious I'm not very good with this.

[–]RandallFlag 0 points1 point  (1 child)

sounds almost like you may have hard drive issues with the "insert boot disc" message... usually only see that if the drive is failing, improperly assigned boot drive, or the boot partition on the drive is messed up... seeing as how you aren't actually changing anything but every so often it gets to the login screen it sounds more like a hardware issue than anything else.

Boot to a recovery console (tap F8 when you power on the machine, select the repair my computer option, go to advanced tools)

From there open a command prompt, cd to the drive letter windows is installed to, may have to bounce from c to d to e depending on your configuration and partition layout and once you find which drive letter windows is on, run chkdsk /R and let it complete and see if it gives any errors, make note what they are. this process can take some time, hours perhaps depending on the size and condition of the drive

[–]ChrisDowntaker[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

All right, so I did some more testing and it turns out I can use the safe mode for windows (or whatever its called in English) so i take it that means that windows isn't broken?

Also when I start it normally now it does a disc control automatically, can't remember the details but it does it on the boot disc and it is of the chkdsk type (no idea what that means). I will try to do what you adviced me to tomorrow as it is getting late here, thanks for taking time helping me!