System restore has locked me out of my desktop


  1. Posts : 1
    Windows 10
       #1

    System restore has locked me out of my desktop


    windowstenforums.com
    My son-in-law works as an IT for a large corporation. Don't know which one. He built me a computer about a year and a half ago and it's worked beautifully. It's a gaming computer with a gaming keyboard and mouse I have NO idea how to utilize or fix it when my cat steps on it and it doesn't light up or type anymore. It is a hit and miss that I do not even know how I get it working again. Like I even 'game'! I WISH I could tell you the specs but I recently have been locked out of my Windows desktop so I can't bring up system information or anything. I believe it is Windows 10 Pro. For about a week or so there were no back or forward buttons in Chrome. It was very irritating and inconvenient. No way that I could tell of to take me back to pages I'd already been on in the same tab. I don't know if I should have uninstalled, reinstalled Chrome, but I chose to use system restore. The restore point was for earlier this month of January 2022. If I had installed an app it was no big deal to lose. In fact, I wondered if it was from an app added to the toolbar (?) so I removed it from Chrome. Once I did the system restore, I was taken to the Automatic Repair page. I'm using a very old laptop to troubleshoot. I had never known about this new Automatic Repair feature. I read how to use it. But it just keeps looping. I am unable to get into safe mode. I have always been unsure of the F numbers like F8. I know sometimes you have to press another key to make them functional. F8 was not doing anything. I read that in Win 10 they changed it to F4 or just 4 and the same with F5 and F6. I then read how to take it back to F8. I was able to do that using the command prompt. Still, nothing worked. In fact, most commands did not let me use them successfully. I then read where we usually use things as a standard user. You had to click on run as administrator. All the solutions offered for my situation did not apply as I cannot get onto my desktop or get to the start key to choose run as. I looked up to see if there was a command to run as administrator. The answer I came up with no matter how I phrased it, was NO. I can't run sfc /scannow or chkdsc. Almost everything I tried came back as an error of some kind not allowing me to successfully use the command. I did not think system restore could do this. I am unwilling to reinstall Windows. there must be a way I can get to my desktop. Unfortunately, the computer did not come with a disc and I did not make one or backup anything. I am a 70-year-old disabled woman who does not remember things very well anymore. I used to get repair discs at a website that allowed me to fix things. This website just goes up to Win XP these days and I've read there is no way to find such a disc unless it was specific to my computer and its components. I have a portable floppy drive. I found before that this was essential to fixing my PC many times in the past. Using the command prompt from the Automatic Repair page Is a Windows shell. It is not a real DOS command prompt. I've never had luck using the shell. Only real Dos. My PC boots up fine and I'm assuming it is in Windows but just not allowing me on my desktop. Changing the safe mode F back to F8 takes you to the old DOS-looking option choices. They are exactly the same choices as the ones changed to F4,5,6. I am unable to get to safe mode and I am totally at a loss of what to do. I don't give up. I'll keep researching until I find a way. I really need some legal info that's on my PC right now, so I'm stressed. ANY help or advice or suggestions would be extremely welcome. Thank you all. P.S. Before I could click submit, the question popped up asking if I remembered to include the ver number for Windows I'm using. I have no clue if it is not Win 10 Pro. The actual ver info is in the computer that I cannot use until this is fixed. Sorry.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 4,453
    Win 11 Pro 22000.708
       #2

    I guess you need to get into the Recovery Environment.

    With the machine running, hold down the Power button until it shuts down.

    Press the Power button again to start it up. Then hold the power button down again to shut it down.

    Repeat that. After 3 forced shutdown, it ought to boot into the Recovery Environment.

    The first thing I'd try is a Startup Repair.

    If that doesn't help, I suggest getting back into the Recovery Environment, opening a command line window, and running:

    sfc /scannow

    That's the System File Checker. It can repair corrupted system files.

    If neither of those help, I'm out of my depth. You may get better answers in the morning.

    The ultimate answer could be to re-install the operating system, but that would eliminate all of your data and programs. You don't have a backup, I suppose.
      My Computers


  3. Posts : 43,249
    Win 10 Pro (22H2) (2nd PC is 22H2)
       #3

    Hello, first try what Bobkn suggests.

    Sorry to hear of your problem and that your system no longer boots properly after using System Restore.
    I had a cat- until she was killed by a car recently- but she was clever and always stepped round the keyboard.

    I had something similar happen recently: I use System Restore, and then BSOD (blue screen of death) every time I tried to restart.

    You will ask "How did you recover from that?"
    I use disk imaging regularly and routinely - a program called Macrium Reflect- the free version.
    So I used that to restore my partitions to as they were before this happened.

    The routine and regular use of disk imaging is endlessly recommended here- provides both a full backup and a means to recover- even if your imaged disk(s) fail - usually without needing technical help, with all the difficulty and delay that entails.

    You say you don't want to reinstall Windows- understandable. Using disk imaging can help you avoid that very often.

    F8- not relevant in Win 10. There is a way to re-enable it, but basically booting is too fast for it to be really useful.
    Now, I have tried to understand the sequence but your dense unparagraphed text makes this hard, so feel free to correct the sequence.

    For anyone reading this it seems (and I've probably missed something):

    when my cat steps on it and it doesn't light up or type anymore
    (unsure if the cat stepped on the keyboard in this case).
    [/QUOTE]
    For about a week or so there were no back or forward buttons in Chrome.
    [/QUOTE]
    I did the system restore, I was taken to the Automatic Repair page.
    But it just keeps looping. I am unable to get into safe mode.
    I am unwilling to reinstall Windows.



    Do you know your password?
    Do you use a PIN?

    SAFE MODE: there are ways to get to Safe Mode: if you were lucky, follow the instructions in Bobkn's post and you may have that option from Advanced Startup.
    Boot into Safe Mode on Windows 10

    Whether you can boot at all depends on whether System Restore has left your registry intact.

    Unfortunately, the computer did not come with a disc
    All Windows builds are freely downloadable and MS provides a tool that creates a bootable installation medium of the current build.
      My Computers


 

  Related Discussions
Our Sites
Site Links
About Us
Windows 10 Forums is an independent web site and has not been authorized, sponsored, or otherwise approved by Microsoft Corporation. "Windows 10" and related materials are trademarks of Microsoft Corp.

© Designer Media Ltd
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 17:59.
Find Us




Windows 10 Forums