My XP won't boot and I have long since not had its Install CD. Through a convoluted use of my other computer, a Linux boot rescue CD, and a large portable USB drive I was able to run CHKDSK on a copy of the bad boot partition (chkdsk made a jillion corrections -- ran for 20-30 minutes), copy that corrected partition from the USB drive back to the bad computer, and run TeskDisk from the Rescue CD to verify MBR and boot records. That eliminated the Blue Screen of Death but still wouldn't boot.
I got a bootup message that HAL.DLL was bad and I successfully copied a good replacement. Now my NTOSKRNL.EXE is bad. I find it's near impossible to find any downloads of that system file. Plus my money is on, that even if I could install a good replacement, it is just the opening of a slew of corrupt system files.
I think I can find a new certified XP install CD and here (finally!) is my question: Will the new CD give me any problems with its key code? Or if need be can I use the original CD key code stamped on the computer case? Will the new CD allow me to run a Repair action rather than a new Install? Am I correct: Repair fixes system files but doesn't mess with data or 3rd party programs? Does it leave the Registry intact (needed if the saved application programs are worth anything)?
Seems simple on the surface, but I'm paranoid over possible Bill Gates' gotchas being buried in there somewhere.
Thanks for any help.
Rod B.
I got a bootup message that HAL.DLL was bad and I successfully copied a good replacement. Now my NTOSKRNL.EXE is bad. I find it's near impossible to find any downloads of that system file. Plus my money is on, that even if I could install a good replacement, it is just the opening of a slew of corrupt system files.
I think I can find a new certified XP install CD and here (finally!) is my question: Will the new CD give me any problems with its key code? Or if need be can I use the original CD key code stamped on the computer case? Will the new CD allow me to run a Repair action rather than a new Install? Am I correct: Repair fixes system files but doesn't mess with data or 3rd party programs? Does it leave the Registry intact (needed if the saved application programs are worth anything)?
Seems simple on the surface, but I'm paranoid over possible Bill Gates' gotchas being buried in there somewhere.
Thanks for any help.
Rod B.