Jagermeister
Premium Member
I need some help or advice from someone who know's a lot more about computers than I do.
My computer has been running very slowly over the past year, and, being the computer savy person I think I am, I proceeded to download a freeware registry cleaner and let it do its job of cleaning up the registry thereby, in theory, speeding up my computer. Well, out the window with theory, reality is, it screwed my computer up........bad.
When I boot up the computer I get the following error:
NTLDR is missing
Press Ctrl+Alt+Del to restart
Now, the first big problem is I don't have any installation disks. This is my old work computer (I was recently laid off and given the opportunity to buy my computer). Since this is my old work computer, I contacted my old IT department for help and their attitude is they don't have enough time to fix and maintain current employee computers let alone fix those of ours who were let go.
Is there anything I can do within the BIOS? I've tried resetting to default parameters but that didn't help. Can I somehow download the missing files and get them on the computer?
The research I've been doing on the internet leads me to believe I may need to reinstall the operating system, which, since I don't have the disks, sent me on an impossible errand of finding a store that still sells XP. Looks like it's all Vista now, however, I don't think my computer has the minimum requirements to run Vista. I think I may be up a creek!
The computer is a Dell running (or used to run) Windows XP.
Thanks for any help or advice.
My computer has been running very slowly over the past year, and, being the computer savy person I think I am, I proceeded to download a freeware registry cleaner and let it do its job of cleaning up the registry thereby, in theory, speeding up my computer. Well, out the window with theory, reality is, it screwed my computer up........bad.
When I boot up the computer I get the following error:
NTLDR is missing
Press Ctrl+Alt+Del to restart
Now, the first big problem is I don't have any installation disks. This is my old work computer (I was recently laid off and given the opportunity to buy my computer). Since this is my old work computer, I contacted my old IT department for help and their attitude is they don't have enough time to fix and maintain current employee computers let alone fix those of ours who were let go.
Is there anything I can do within the BIOS? I've tried resetting to default parameters but that didn't help. Can I somehow download the missing files and get them on the computer?
The research I've been doing on the internet leads me to believe I may need to reinstall the operating system, which, since I don't have the disks, sent me on an impossible errand of finding a store that still sells XP. Looks like it's all Vista now, however, I don't think my computer has the minimum requirements to run Vista. I think I may be up a creek!
The computer is a Dell running (or used to run) Windows XP.
Thanks for any help or advice.