Computer Crashed but Hopefully not Burnt...

Discussion in 'Software' started by sandiegojoe, Jul 28, 2008.

  1. sandiegojoe

    sandiegojoe Private E-2

    Hello Everyone,
    It’s been a year since I last came to this site. Reading through these posts helped me solve my last problem, so I thought I would try to post here as I am stumped with this problem.

    I have a Toshiba Satellite M45-S359 Laptop. It is in good condition and worked perfectly for about a year with no problems until last week. Best laptop I have ever owned.

    Last week while looking for apartments on Craigslist, I clicked a link to supposedly view some pictures of a place for rent. When I clicked the link, a page partially displayed and then a small window popped up saying I need to download an Active X Codec in order to view the page properly. I clicked OK and a DOS screen popped up and started installing a bunch of files. I shut down the laptop as soon as I could but it was too late.

    When I restarted the machine I had some sort of virus or something. The windows messenger started popping up with warnings about the laptop being infected something called “worm.win32.netbooster” and offering to fix it if I click yes. Clicking yes took me to a website selling some product to get rid of it. The virus also changed my home page to this same site, and kept connecting to the internet and popping up ads for that site. None of these warnings were from my AVG virus and spyware software that has served me well until now.

    This bug consumed much on the machines resources and made it difficult to continue using the laptop. I wanted to backup up my files and reload my system. It seemed to know what I was trying to do and kept doing things to hinder my progress.

    I backed up about 60 gigs of personal and music files with my external drive, but this bug fought me all the way, removing the icons to my C and D drives, disabling my anti-virus software, corrupting some of my files, freezing the system, and eventually deleting my CD/DVD drivers making the drive inoperable.

    At this point I tried to use my recovery CD but my drive wouldn’t work. I downloaded new drivers from Toshiba and was able to run the recovery CD. It ran successfully for about 20 minutes and got about half way through, when a window popped saying something like “Cannot Output File “QLL…(something)” Would you like to proceed with out this file?” I clicked yes and the screen went black, the laptop rebooted, and I now get a continuous loop with the same error messages no matter what I try. Also, no matter what button or combination of buttons I try at startup or otherwise, I CAN NOT GET INTO THE BIOS to change the boot sequence from network to CD, and I CAN NOT GET THE LAPTOP TO RECOGNIZE A DISK (recovery CD or windows XP CD, etc). When I boot up I get the initial Toshiba screen, it asks for and accepts my bios password, then proceeds to show the same error messages.

    This weekend I completely disassembled the laptop, checked for loose pieces, damaged parts, and disconnected wires and cables. I found nothing out of place. I wanted to remove the CMOS battery to clear the BIOS, but found it to be spot welded and soldered to the mother board. I reassembled the machine and the problem remains. I have tried removing the hard drive and CD, and then restarting (nothing changes), reinstalling the components and restarting again, but still nothing different happens.

    Here is the looping screen that I get:

    Checking CD, No Bootable CD (flashes quickly with or without a CD in the drive)

    Yukon PXE v3.03 alpha01 (20040913)
    (c) Copyright 2003-2004 Marvell (r). All Rights Reserved

    Pre Boot eXecution Environment (PXE) v2.1
    (c) Copyright 1997-2000 Intel Corporation

    PXE-E61: Media Test Failure, Check Cable

    PXE-M0F: Exiting PXE ROM

    Press Any Key To Continue (only displays when the hard drive is removed) (hitting any key just loops it again)


    I’m totally stumped for what to do next. Any ideas or suggestion would be greatly appreciated.

    San Diego Joe
     
  2. chaslang

    chaslang MajorGeeks Admin - Master Malware Expert Staff Member

    Welcome to Major Geeks!

    We could have helped you remove your malware before you ran the Recovery CD procedure. Now you are no longer in the realm of the Malware Forum since the problems you face now are not due to malware. As such I will move this to the Software Forum.
     
  3. sandiegojoe

    sandiegojoe Private E-2

    Hello again...I didn't get any replies from this forum...but I did get a good idea from another...Here's an update of what I tried,

    It was suggested that I try to connect my laptop harddrive to another computer and reload Windows on it that way. Once I got it satrted, I could Flash the BIOS, and then run the recovery CD for an OEM reinstall.

    The drive in my laptop is 100 gigs and has the SATA connections. I remembered that my girlfriend’s desktop computer has a spare set of those connectors dangling inside (I was in there adding a hard drive to hers a while back). I took the drive out of my laptop and plugged it into hers then started it up. It recognized my drive and then tried to repair it, stating it had some errors. I stopped that, and instead did a quick format. I tried to install a full version of Windows XP on the drive but it wanted to install it on her computer and not my drive. I unplugged her hard drive and booted her computer from the Windows CD and was able to do a complete Windows install onto my laptop drive.

    I put the drive in my laptop and turned it on. It tries to start and then stops at the screen that says “Windows did not shut down properly last time…etc” and offers the options of starting in “Safe Mode…etc”. I can scroll up and down to the different options, but no matter which one I choose, it just freezes. It also freezes when the little 30 second timer at the bottom gets to 0.

    I did however discover something I hadn’t read before anywhere else. As I was experimenting with various key combinations to try and get into my bios, I found this interesting trick:

    When I push the power button on my Toshiba M45-S359 Laptop, I get the standard looking Toshiba screen (The Toshiba screen is black with large red letters that say “Toshiba” and under that are 4 small icon-like pictures), and after a few seconds then I get another black screen with small white letters asking for my bios password. I enter my password, and in my case, the computer fails to start. If I push “control-alt-delete” the laptop restarts. I immediately push and hold the “F12 button” and after a few seconds the laptop pauses at the Toshiba screen (Large red letters with 4 small icons). If I continue holding the “F12 button”, a row of dashes appears below the icons, and one of the dashes is orange colored like a cursor. The orange dash can be moved by the left and right arrows. Now that I look closer, I can see that these icons represent the “hard drive”, “CD drive”, “floppy drive”, and “network” as a boot source. Hitting enter selects the highlighted icon.

    This information does me no good at this time…but I thought maybe some of you out there might be able to take advantage of this trick.

    Anyways, I’m going to try repeating the above process, but this time I’m going to try doing a complete format, then check the hard drive for errors with chkdsk or something if I can, and then try reloading Windows on the drive again.

    I’m still open to any additional ideas.
    Thanks,
    SanDiegoJoe
     
    Last edited: Jul 30, 2008

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