Grub Error message
Hi there,
When I boot my PC, grub shows a line which says "Error: /boot/grub..." but it goes away way too fast for me to read.
After reading wiki and forums, I supposed it's something related to locales, and I copied en.mo into /boot/grub/locale. The current files on this directory are the following:
$ cd /boot/grub/locale/
$ ls
ast.mo de.mo en.mo fi.mo ja.mo sv.mo
ca.mo [email protected] [email protected] fr.mo nl.mo uk.mo
da.mo [email protected] [email protected] hu.mo pa.mo vi.mo
de_CH.mo [email protected] en_US.mo id.mo pl.mo zh_CN.mo
[email protected] [email protected] eo.mo it.mo ru.mo zh_TW.mo
Yet, it seems that the error still persists.
Is there any log file where I can read that error so I could provide with more details? I tried to rebuild the config file, reinstall grub, etc... but nothing seems to work.
Thank you
DSpider wrote:
I copied en.mo into /boot/grub/locale.
See: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Be … Guide#GRUB
# cp /usr/share/locale/en\@quot/LC_MESSAGES/grub.mo /boot/grub/locale/en.mo
Edit: You don't need to reinstall GRUB.
I followed again the instructions step by step just in case I forgot something, and executed the command "cp /usr/share/locale/en\@quot/LC_MESSAGES/grub.mo /boot/grub/locale/en.mo" as root. However the error message before grub menu keeps appearing and I'm unable to read it due to the speed.
Similar Messages
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GRUB error message 15 after installation[SOLVED]
during my installation from a live cd (on disk..not net install) I installed GRUB onto the mbr. I am dual booting with Windows Vista and thankfully it boots up from the GRUB menu. When I try to boot arch linux I get an error 15.
I've tried to install GRUB onto my arch root partition (/dev/sda3) using chroot but I can't seem to get those much needed files in order for arch to boot up properly. I am not sure whether or not GRUB was put onto the Windows partition or not.
This is basically what I did to try to fix the problem unsuccessfully:
grub root (hd0,2)
grub setup (hd0,2)
grub quit
#reboot
I looked at my /boot/grub/menu.lst and put root=UUID=<partition UUID for sda3> for both my fallback and regular arch.
Any help on this confusing issue would be much appreciated.
Last edited by rg_arc (2011-08-15 21:02:50)Inxsible wrote:
DaemonOfChaos wrote:
PSW wrote:Is there a way to change the Arch Installer to compensate for this?
Definitely have to second this one.
I just completed a fresh net install and encountered this error. I spent more time correcting this issue than the install took.
It also does not provide for a good impression when a system cannot boot up after a fresh install.
There are releng isos available at http://releng.archlinux.org
These are very latest isos generated every couple of days, so you are guaranteed to be updated (almost). Use them, report bugs, so that they get fixed and then they will be released as official versions.
Unfortunately, every one complains about the official iso not working, but no one is willing to test the releng isos to help out the devs. I do understand the due the rolling release nature of Arch, its tedious to have to test installation isos, once you have completed the installation -- but no gain without some pain.
I will give those a try as I am happy to help test. Since I have a system I can play with a failure won't be an issue.
I have been using Ubuntu / Linux Mint and thought I would give Arch a try. I do understand your point of view but on the flip-side (devil's advocate perhaps?) an "official ISO" should always work. Otherwise what is the point of it being official? -
[SOLVED] - Grub Error 15 on Fresh Install
I've created a Boot CD from the archlinux-2011.08.19-core-i686.iso and booted from the CD.
I've used both Autoconfig and Manual to set up my 4 Gig USB Flash Drive - /dev/sdb
BOOT - /dev/sdb1: UUID="467fc66a-6c36-48ab-a7f3-69f449407927" TYPE="ext2" Size=1003.53 Meg
SWAP - /dev/sdb2: UUID="f83191f6-cdf3-4647-80e2-86ac73063725" TYPE="swap" Size=259.75 Meg
/dev/sdb3: UUID="fc7e8565-6668-4370-bb32-33d2d89ee28e" TYPE="ext2" Size=2.02 Gig
/dev/sdb4: UUID="00055f18-3e0a-48b8-a9c5-5593aacc2bee" TYPE="ext2" Size=676.91 Meg
unallocated 1.68 Meg
Disk /dev/sdb: 4206 MB, 4206886912 bytes
130 heads, 62 sectors/track, 1019 cylinders
Units = cylinders of 8060 * 512 = 4126720 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disk identifier: 0x00002773
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/sdb1 * 1 255 1027619 83 Linux
/dev/sdb2 256 321 265980 82 Linux swap / Solaris
/dev/sdb3 322 847 2119780 83 Linux
/dev/sdb4 848 1019 693160 83 Linux
No matter how I prepare the USB Flash Drive I get the Grub Error message as follows:
Booting Arch Linux
Root (HD1,0)
Filesystem type is ext2fs, Partition Type 0x83
Kernel /vmlinux-linux root-/dev/disk/by-uuid/xxx-xxxx-xxx-xxx ro
ERROR 15: File not Found
In Grub I've tried:
root (HD
and HD0, HD1 are the Options. HD1 is my USB Flash Drive (sdb)
find /boot/grub/stage1 finds nothing.............
I'd think that stage1 would be found if Grub was installed properly.
I've tried EXT2, EXT3, and the following sizes....Boot as 100 Meg, Root as 1800 Meg, Swap as 256 Meg, and Home = Remainder (~1800).
I've searched this Forum and haven't found any answer that makes my USB Flash Drive Boot. At this point I'm stuck.
Is there something I'm overlooking?
Thanks.
Larry
Last edited by lkraemer (2012-02-21 15:17:21)Thanks, DSpyder I already had it as hd0,0. I found the clue here to get my USB Booting.
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/In … _a_USB_key
I used /dev/sdbx versus the UUID, and edited the /etc/mkinitcpio.conf, add the usb hook to the hooks array right after udev.
Larry -
[Solved] Grub not displaying menu, error messages from grub-mkconfig
Hi I'm new
I have (or rather, am trying to setup) a dual boot with Windows 8.1 and Arch, with each OS on separate SSDs.
Windows 8.1 already installed, Arch installation (seems to have) has gone smoothly. However, when I remove the installation usb, and try to boot, I get a command line prompt:
grub >_
...instead of a menu. I tried typing 'boot', but got 'you need to load the kernel first'. So I cannot access my arch installation without chrooting (or knowing how to compile the kernel in the command line, which I could not find after a lot of searching)
I followed the documentation in the Beginner's Guide and the GRUB page for installing and configuring GRUB. This is UEFI (grub2), not BIOS (grub legacy).
pacman -S grub efibootmgr
grub-install --target=x86S64-efi --efi-directory=/boot --bootloader-id=arch_grub --recheck
No error messages. I also installed os-prober for kicks. When I went to generate the config file (as recommended for beginners), I got a torrent of what I interpreted to be error messages, not just copacetic output:
grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
resulted in:
click this link for error messages
(sorry about the image. I had to shutdown and reboot into my windows partition, since I still can't arch it up. If any/all of you have a better way to reproduce output and feel it pertinent, I'm all ears)
so upon exiting chroot and rebooting, grub boots up to the above effect; no menu is displayed. And I am sad panda.
Background Information:
Partition scheme:
/dev/sda1 - BIOS boot partition (I didn't read carefully, lol)
/dev/sda2 - EFI System Partition - mounted to /mnt/boot when chrooting in
/dev/sda3 - Root partition - mounted to /mnt/ when chrooting in
/dev/sda4 - Home partition - mounted to /mnt/home when chrooting in
The installation and configuration described above was done in chroot with the above partition scheme
I originally had issues booting into UEFI mode with the arch iso (written to a usb stick for the initial install). The boot would hang at 'triggering uevents'. I ultimately fixed this by pressing 'e' in the bootloader menu (also grub, I believe) and prepended
linux /boot/vmlinux-linux root=UUID=978e3e81-8048-4ae1-8a06-aa727458e8ff nomodeset nouveau.modeset=0
It then (successfully triggered uevents? and) booted normally
ALSO:
This is a custom built pc.
Hardware:
intel i7 4930K
ASUS Sabertooth X79 mobo
ASUS GTX 780 Ti gpu
ballistix sport DDR3 RAM (4 x 8 GB)
3 x 128 GB SSD (ADATA P900)
1 x 2 TB HDD (Toshiba, 7200 rpm)
Hey, if you made it to the bottom of this post, I really appreciate you taking the time out of your day. Thank you!
Last edited by Otsdarva (2014-06-09 03:22:25)I realized that since I was not using EFISTUB, I could not mount the ESP to /boot; it had to be /boot/efi. A quick remount-reinstall of grub, then rerunning grub-mkconfig solved the issue.
Also, regarding WonderWoofy's suggestion: I learned by trying gummiboot that for whatever reason the kernel hadn't compiled properly when I ran
pacstrap /mnt base base-devel
Fixed via
pacman -S linux
Thanks for your help, everybody! -
Howdy, I did an update today (among other things), and now I get the following error after I select my OS in grub:
error: null src bitmjap in grub_video_bitmap_create_scaled
I have no idea what this means, and I hadn't seen it until today. However, it seems to just be an annoyance as I can boot just fine after waiting 3-5 seconds.
Here is my grub.cfg:
http://pastebin.com/uPajySca
EDIT: On second thought, this might have happened all along. I just noticed that it only shows the error if I select a kernel from the submenu. I'd still like to know whats up with it, though
Last edited by sgillespie (2014-11-05 02:30:19)On second thought, it might have been there all along. I just noticed that it only shows up if I drill down to the sub-menus.
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I thought that it may have been just me. After reading other posts which state that others are getting the same message, I now feel not so all alone. I have a clue that I don't know what to do with...but here it is...
I just bought a new Ipod nano, and had to download the latest Itunes in order to sync my new pod. The error message in question just occurred after downloading the latest Itunes. No such message while using the older version.You're starting X via inittab I assume? While booting, append 3 to the kernel line in grub (just the number 3, nothing else) and continue booting, this way it won't even attempt to start X. Then you can go through your configuration and log files, especially Xorg.0.log.
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When Audio Console launched, Unable to find audio device error message comes
When I launch audio console, I get an error message saying:
"Unable to find audio device. Please make sure that your audio device is enabled and installed with its driver. This application will be closed."
This can't be right because my soundblaster audigy 2 ZS platinum card is installed, its working, I can hear things etc.
I uninstalled and reinstalled the audio console software package from creative and that fixed the problem for a very short while and it is now reoccurring.
I've had this same setup for several years with no issues, now all of a sudden, this is happening.
Anyone out there had similar challenges?
Thanks for looking!Message Edited by dgmtoronto on 07-22-200703:33 PMMost probably you don't have passed the correct root= option to the kernel so that the kernel cannot, as it says, find its root device. Read the wiki page about refind in order to know how to configure it (https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/REFInd). Refind as no fully automatic configuration like grub.
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[SOLVED] Grub Error "Read or write outside of disk hd0"
Trying to install Arch Linux (as per client request) on an old Seagate Mirra Personal Server. I reflashed the bios to get rid of the Seagate modified ROM and put the standard, stock, VIA bios image on there. Everything boots fine, it boots windows fine. But when I install Arch Linux on the drive and try to boot, it errors out with
Booting...
GRUB Loading.
Welcome to GRUB!
error: attempt to read or write outside of disk 'hd0'.
Entering rescue mode...
grub rescue>
When I ran grub-install and grub-mkconfig during installation neither reported errors or warnings. I'm open to ideas but I need to fix this sooner rather later as this is for a client. A forum thread I found in regards to Ubuntu and grub error 18 said to run:
apt-get remove linux-server
apt-get install linux-386
under Ubuntu and then it would boot. I know Arch removed i386 support a few months ago but im finding it hard to believe that the error above is because of an architecture mismatch. Also I didnt think the CPU in this thing was that old. Hardware Info from the arch live cd says
CPU Vendor: Centaur
CPU Model: VIA Nehemiah
1 core, 64k L2 Cache, 32bit
the Mirra is from 2007 or so, so I expected i686 Arch to be just fine for it.
Ideas???
EDIT:
Wikipedia's Article: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VIA_C3
States: "Additionally, it implemented the cmov instruction, making it a 686-class processor"
So it shouldn't be an issue of i386 vs i686, right?
Last edited by FathisAeril (2013-04-26 21:46:11)Good morning to all of You.
Sorry for posting in a [SOLVED] thread but I find the info that I am about to add relevant and I am betting my vital organs that someone else might find it interesting too.
I did an upgrade last night on my Thinkpad 600E. I was not upgrading it for several days (2 weeks tops) as I lost my USB wifi card and had no internet access on this particular machine. So...
As always before upgrade I checked my rss reader for news and sure enough there was a very informative post from Allan (thanks Dude btw.) in there:
https://www.archlinux.org/news/binaries … ervention/
I did as I was told and upgraded in the indicated way. All was peachy till I rebooted to get new kernel to load. I was met with the mentioned error:
error: attempt to read or write outside of disk 'hd0'.
but the second part was slightly different.
Error: You need to load kernel first
SO since the error was different why am I posting here? Because even after Googling the whole error message this post was the first to come up in my search results so I am betting others will get here as well.
Solution? After an hour or so of fighting (I tried booting up from the Arch CD and fscking partitions, reinstalling / reconfiguring grub, downgrading grub-bios and grub-common packages and many many other things) I finally rebooted to the Arch cd, chrooted (for all those that do not know what that means I would like to recommend this link as chrooting is explained in it https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Be … %27_Guide) to the installation and I have reinstalled the linux (kernel) package and redid the image with the:
mkinitcpio -p linux
and rebooted. Turns out that did the trick. Apparently something went wrong during the kernel upgrade. Possibly due to the changes explained in Allan's article. Reinstalling kernel / recreating image did the trick for me.
So if You are still wondering what am I doing here and why am I replying in this thread - the answer is - 99% search results from Google suggests that this error means incompatibility between bios and the hard drive AND there is nothing really out there that I found helpful in this case. I mean it could not be a bios / hdd incompatibility. This drive has been used in this machine for few years and it was running Arch since November 2012... so this just could not be the case. I am just giving a shout to all those that will get this error that there is another option too.
Kind regards. Thanks for reading. My apologies again for sticking my nose in.
Andrzej
Edit: Few months later the same error - fix does not work... Trying to figure it out...
Last edited by AndrzejL (2013-10-19 02:43:15) -
[Solved] Grub error when booting...
Today I decided to try out Archlinux everything worked fine until the reboot.. Grub doesn't seem to work as intended, grub just kept posting:
GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB
nothing but "GRUB" came up.
My menu.lst:
default 0
timeout 3
color light-blue/black light-cyan/blue
title Arch Linux
root (hd0,0)
kernel /vmlinuz26 root=/dev/sda3 ro vga=773
initrd /kernel26.img
Title Arch Linux Fallback
root (hd0,0)
kernel /vmlinuz root=/dev/sda3 ro vga=773
initrd /kernel26-fallback.img
version: 0.8beta2
I haven't found any threads about it, if there's any i'm sorry for bringing up a new one.
any suggests?
Last edited by Neko-san (2007-03-12 19:16:41)SleepingGiant08 wrote:see this http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/grub-error-guide.xml
scroll down to Error 7...
oohh.. there it is, I guess I didn't look enough thanks tho :)
vacant wrote:
GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB GRUB
Maybe you should start a poll "Vote for the most useless linux error message" ;)
True, not that good error message ^^
This is how I did it:
boot: arch root=/dev/sda3
grub
root (hd0,0)
setup (hd0)
quit
reboot
Last edited by Neko-san (2007-03-12 20:33:30) -
[Solved] fbsplash error message
Hello!
I've been following the steps in the wiki: http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Fbsplash
I installed fbsplash from the AUR. But when I do
splash_manager -c demo -t darch -m s --steps=100
I get the error message:
/usr/bin/splash_manager: line 900: //lib/splash/bin/fgconsole: No such file or directory
/usr/bin/splash_manager: line 944: //lib/splash/bin/fbres: No such file or directory
Error: Theme 'darch' doesn't seem to provide a config file for the current resolution (0x0).
Tried to find the config file for the darch theme, but don't really know what to do.
Thanks for you help!
Last edited by Odd-rationale (2008-02-07 13:53:02)when you restart wait for the grub screen and press e and check the 1st line it will start with kernel read all that line until you see vga=... if it doesn't then that might be the cause of your problem
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[Solved] How to Suppress Kernel Boot Error Messages?
In
/var/log/errors.log
I get this output while booting:
May 26 00:28:30 localhost kernel: [ 6.943801] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdb] No Caching mode page present
May 26 00:28:30 localhost kernel: [ 6.943802] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdb] Assuming drive cache: write through
May 26 00:28:30 localhost kernel: [ 6.945795] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdb] No Caching mode page present
May 26 00:28:30 localhost kernel: [ 6.945797] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdb] Assuming drive cache: write through
May 26 00:28:30 localhost kernel: [ 6.950164] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdb] No Caching mode page present
May 26 00:28:30 localhost kernel: [ 6.950166] sd 6:0:0:0: [sdb] Assuming drive cache: write through
sdb is an external USB 2.0 2TB harddrive formatted as NTFS. My /etc/fstab line for it is:
/dev/sdb1 /media/Win_USB ntfs-3g uid=1000,gid=users,fmask=113,dmask=0022 0 0
My
/etc/udev/rules.d/
directory is empty.
The drive works correctly both under Arch and under Windows 7 in this machine's dual-boot. Googling so far has shown that the above errors are nothing out of the ordinary.
I would like to suppress just those error messages on boot and also do not write them to errors.log.
I do not even have a clue for what I should be searching for to do that. Perhaps someone can helpfully point me to the correct page in the Wiki?
Edit, and "fdisk -l" returns:
Disk /dev/sdb: 2000.4 GB, 2000398934016 bytes
255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 243201 cylinders, total 3907029168 sectors
Units = sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disk identifier: 0x6bf2b3a4
Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System
/dev/sdb1 63 3907024064 1953512001 7 HPFS/NTFS/exFAT
For sdb.
Last edited by headkase (2012-05-30 17:54:29)erikw wrote:I have this problem too but loglevel=4 does not hide them for me.
You misread.
headkase wrote:
From Here led to Here I set "loglevel=3" in my kernel boot line.
From /boot/grub/menu.lst, my new kernel line looks like this:
kernel /vmlinuz-linux root=/dev/sda4 ro loglevel=3
At loglevel=4 the messages reappear.
See above; you need loglevel=3. -
Linux/Unix error messages & troubleshooting notes
I am looking for some book/notes where i can check linux/unix error messages and what's there meaning? & possible what's fix? & any troubleshooting guide would help too....
eg
SQL> connect /as sysdba;
ERROR:
ORA-09925: Unable to create audit trail file
IBM AIX RISC System/6000 Error: 89: Invalid file system control data detected
Additional information: 9925
ORA-09925: Unable to create audit trail file
IBM AIX RISC System/6000 Error: 89: Invalid file system control data detected
Additional information: 9925DBA2008 wrote:
I am looking for some metalink notes# /document for Linux Troubleshooting, i want to know more about these topics
1. Troubleshooting Techniques
Troubleshooting methods
Best practices
Tools
2. Troubleshooting Boot Issues
Working with advanced GRUB features
Rescue and GRUB CDs
Advanced ext2/ext3 filesystem repair
Rescuing RAID and LVM volumes
3. Local Configuration
Tools to identify configuration problems
4. Hardware
Preempting hardware failures (looking for the signs)
Protecting against hardware failures
Redundant configurations
Tools to help identify hardware failures and intermittent problems
5. Applications
Tools and techniques for troubleshooting applications
Common application problems and how to solve them
6. Network
Manual configuration of network cards
Troubleshooting advanced setups (bonded interfaces, virtual interfaces)
Connectivity issues
Network diagnostic tools
7. Security
Working effectively with (and not against) security tools, including SELinux, SSL, and authentication
8. Red Hat Resources and Reporting Problems
Support options
Knowledgebase
Certified training
Initiating support calls
TAM support
Developer support
Bugzillas
Support workflow
Diagnostic and information-gathering tools
Edited by: DBA2008 on May 14, 2009 4:02 PMHave you done and got the training for RHCT/RCHE or taken advantage of training, eg cdrom or classrom, as listed here:
[http://education.oracle.com/pls/web_prod-plq-dad/db_pages.getsearchpage?page_id=13&p_search_category_id=1345]
or
[http://education.oracle.com/pls/web_prod-plq-dad/show_desc.redirect?dc=D46590GC10&p_org_id=28&lang=US]
That would seem the most sensible way of covering that vastness of ground. -
Error messages while installing x86 on PIII
How can I over come that error messages while installing x86 on PIII GA-60XT Socket 370 Processor Motherboard .
Strange problem . I did not face that problem with previous versions
of Solaris 10. I used Sun's Download Manager with the same results. I
used Nero to burn the DVD file : sol-10-u5-ga-x86-dvd.iso.
Those are the steps I did . Please tell me any errors about it :
---Start of steps----------------------------------------
I entered in the GRUB append -kd instead of cdrom and then reboot :
Welcom to kmdb
[0] > cmi_no_init/W1
cmi_no_init 0 = 0x1
Error : unable to configrte Network interface.
Exiting to shell.
#exit
nfs mount : nfs file system , use [host:]path
then I navigate with the installation program :
Keyboard layout
language
hostname
password
Error : the disk you inserted is not a Solaris OS CD/DVD.
F2
There were problems loading the media from /cdrom
-----End of steps-----------------------------------
ThanksAre you using a computer Administrator account?
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[SOLVED] [GRUB error] "no such device" "vmlinuz-linux not found"
SOLUTION AT POST #11
I just completed the install process onto a new machine. Grub starts but then returns these error messages.
Booting 'Arch GNU/Linux, with Linux core repo kernel'
error: no such device: ad4103fa-d940-47ca-8506-301d8071d467.
Loading Linux core repo kernel ...
error: file '/boot/vmlinuz-linux' not found.
Loading initial ramdisk ...
error: you need to load the kernel first.
Press any key to continue...
I installed Arch via a flashdrive (sdb), onto SATA port 1 (sda). SDA has a fresh MBR. Unfortunately, I have no way to post my grub config files. What files must I modify to get GRUB to work properly?
fstab: http://sprunge.us/SVMi
grub.cfg: http://sprunge.us/hQCB
Edit: Thread solved.
Last edited by qKUqm3wtY4 (2013-01-31 03:36:43)SOLUTION
by: jynnantonix
Step 1: Start Arch via boot disc.
Step 2: Connect to internet.
Step 3: Mount partitions.
# swapon dev/sdX
# mount /dev/sdX /mnt
# mount /dev/sdX /mnt/home
# mount /dev/sdX /mnt/boot
Step 4: Chroot
# arch-chroot /mnt
Step 5: Remake grub.conf
# grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
Another Notable Tip by: jynnantonix
If you need to post information from terminal to the internet, use the following:
[insert command here] | curl -F 'sprunge=<-' http://sprunge.us
example: ls -l /dev/disk/by-uuid/ | curl -F 'sprunge=<-' http://sprunge.us
example: cat /boot/grub/grub.cfg | curl -F 'sprunge=<-' http://sprunge.us
Last edited by qKUqm3wtY4 (2013-01-31 04:04:49) -
Windows Vista: Ipod Error Message, no longer read by PCs
Hello,
I have a 5th generation black ipod video with 30GB of memory.
The other day I hooked it up to my laptop (Toshiba, 4 months old) that it's been functioning on with no problems whatsoever. This weird error message flashed twice about it not being able to sync because of some software problem.
Eversince then, the only thing I can charge my ipod on is the family treadmill in the basement (~_~) as no other computer in the house recognizes it. I can't even charge it through the wall sockets, either.
I have changed the ipod cord, still no luck. I've also reset the device about 3 or 4 times and uninstalled, restarted the laptop then reinstalled itunes. I would like to reset it back to factory settings but that's impossible as computers/laptops don't pick it up. I live very far from a Mac store...
What's a girl to do? I can't live without my Busta Rhymes and Wu-Tang Clan!
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