If Your MS-DOS or Windows NT Operating System Does Not BootLast reviewed: September 9, 1996Article ID: Q135461 |
The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMSWhen you try to boot your computer running Windows NT or MS-DOS, the operating system does not boot and you receive one of the following messages:
NO ROM BASIC : SYSTEM HALTED -or- Press a key to rebootIf you press a key to reboot, the message appears again. NOTE: Depending on the manufacturer of the CMOS or BIOS the message text may vary.
CAUSEThe CMOS or BIOS of your computer displays this message on your screen if drive C, the primary partition on the first physical hard disk, is no longer marked as the active boot partition.
RESOLUTIONTo resolve this problem, mark the primary partition active.
Your Computer Runs Windows NTTo mark the primary partition active, boot your computer with a Windows NT boot disk and run Disk Administrator. You cannot use the Emergency Repair Disk (ERD), because it does not mark the partition active. If you do not have a Windows NT boot disk, you need another computer on which you can create a Windows NT boot disk:
Your Computer Runs MS-DOSTo mark the primary partition active:
1. On a computer running MS-DOS, create a bootable floppy disk. 2. Copy the file FDISK.EXE from that computer's DOS directory to the floppy disk. 3. On your problem computer, boot from the floppy disk. 4. Run FDISK.EXE to mark the primary partition active. 5. Remove the floppy disk from the drive. 6. Reboot your computer to boot the operating system on drive C. |
KBCategory: kbsetup kberrmsg
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