From there you can get to safe mode and use the troubleshooting and repair options. So, your first aim should be to get to WinRE. If it can’t fix it, it should switch to the Windows Recovery Environment, otherwise known as Windows RE or WinRE, which boils down to two options:ġ) Start Windows in safe mode using the code on the internal hard drive, then use the troubleshooting routines to fix it.Ģ) Use code on an external device such as a recovery DVD or USB thumbdrive to start Windows, and then repair or replace the code on the internal hard drive. If Windows 10 knew you had a blank or even a black screen of death, it would try to fix it.
Given that tens of thousands of expert programmers have worked on the code over the past 30 years, the number of safe, simple, significant and forwards-/backwards-compatible improvements may be quite small. Microsoft has spent a lot of time (and money) trying to make Windows self-repairing, partly because it generally gets the blame when other programs – or users – try to “improve” it. Said machine then bricked: boot begins, then the screen blanks.Īre there any steps that I can take to recover access to the machine? Failing that, can I recover my files from the hard drive, installed in a USB cradle? John When it restarted, it reported a missing component. I recently ran a free trial of a PC tune-up utility, including a disk clean-up routine, on my Windows 10 laptop.