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Solve : Manually shut down computer during windows update?

Answer» <html><body><p>My windos update (a Servicepack update) was taking a very long <a href="https://interviewquestions.tuteehub.com/tag/time-19467" style="font-weight:bold;" target="_blank" title="Click to know more about TIME">TIME</a> to update, so I <a href="https://interviewquestions.tuteehub.com/tag/manuallybrbr-2814100" style="font-weight:bold;" target="_blank" title="Click to know more about MANUALLY">MANUALLY</a> shut down the computer.  Upon powering it back up, the "Startup Repair" ran and had me restart a few different times.  After about 5 times, its said that windows cannot repair this computer automatically.<br/><br/>Any ways to fix this?<br/><br/>ThanksWhat Windows version?<br/><br/> Quote</p><blockquote>so I manually shut down the computer</blockquote> You won't do it in the future, will you? Quote from: bigjim28 on July 27, 2008, 12:57:13 PM<blockquote>I manually shut down the computer.</blockquote> <br/>By pressing the power button? Or (even) worse, pulling the plug? Man, you were crazy to do this!<br/>Ok, I fixed it.  It was vista.  I ran the system <a href="https://interviewquestions.tuteehub.com/tag/restore-1187258" style="font-weight:bold;" target="_blank" title="Click to know more about RESTORE">RESTORE</a> feature by pressing F8 (or control and F11) right away when the computer restarted and going to "boot with last known good configuration".  It basically started my windows as brand <a href="https://interviewquestions.tuteehub.com/tag/new-1114486" style="font-weight:bold;" target="_blank" title="Click to know more about NEW">NEW</a> and I had to back up all files.<br/><br/>Not a <a href="https://interviewquestions.tuteehub.com/tag/great-2556" style="font-weight:bold;" target="_blank" title="Click to know more about GREAT">GREAT</a> fix but it works, and probably is the only option.<br/><br/>ThanksThanks for posting back</body></html>


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