Pop a DVD in the drive (thats clean), right click on the iso and click 'burn disk image'. Look for a checkbox to verify the files after burning as this saves a lot of messing about especially if the iso didn't burn correctly. click ok and you good to go. The process will take about 25-40 minutes depending on hardware. Once the files have been verified the drive will open meaning the burn has completed.Whats the safest way to convert the ISO into a reliable DVD
It Does?Looks like the hard drive is toast!
Thanks Kemical & Bigbearjedi. I took your suggestions and ran the Seatools. The detail sector by sector scan showed no bad sectors at all. I reformatted the HD and tried to install Win-7 SP1 32 bit DVD (received from MS) I got an error message. This happens after it goes through expanding about half of the files. i.e. "Windows cannot install required files. The file may be corrupted or missing. Make sure all files required for installation are available and restart the installation. Error code 0x80070570".
Just for a confirmation I installed a brand new hard drive. I got the same error message as above. How can I have corrupted files from a new DVD and installing on a new hard drive ?
I talked to ASUS for help, thinking that I may have an out of date BIOS. Their tech help confirmed that even though the motherboard is about 7 years old the BIOS is up to date. I am speculating that maybe - just maybe - some chip in the mobo is failing.
Is there a diagnostics to check the mobo ?
Yet I can restore the existing Win-7, all its applications and data from my backup. One other clue may tell you something. The SFC/Scannow; done in both the normal & safe modes; hangs up with a message that windows could not repair it. Yet the Win-7 restored from the backup runs OK
Its very frustrating to not be able to find out why it cannot update to Win-7 SP1 -- which stops me from upgrading to Win-10 !!
Appreciate any other ideas guys.
Hi n2b,I am not knowledgeable enough to understand the mechanism of how the RAM and the mobo interact. Maybe somebody at this forum may have an explanation as to why less RAM interacts flawlessly during installation of an OS whereas the higher capacity RAM would hang up, and yet with the higher RAM capacity the OS runs fine and faster during normal operations and other updates.
Well most moBo's have a compatibility list and of course for RAM details (timings ect) some are present in the little SPD chip attached to the side.Properly matching ram involves knowing density, cas latency and ecc factor which is so hard to find on any given stick of ram these days.
Yes..Any ideas what might be causing this
Kemical
I am thoroughly confused. I opened the MS Update Catalog. It was a blank blue page with only the update logo and nothing else. I am using IE ver 11.0. and opened Active X and am running as an Administrator. How do I select the updates from this convenient roll up?