Error Messages
- "A voltage probe has exceeded a non-critical threshold. Contact your Help Desk or Dell Technical Support for further assistance."
- "Computer Beeps during POST"
- Not enough memory/ Insufficient memory
2. Restart your computer
- "One beep followed by three, four, or five beeps"
- "Two Beep"
- "Two beeps followed by three, four, or five beeps"
- "Three beeps follow by three, four, or five beeps"
- "Four beeps follow by two, three, or four beeps"
- "Continuous beeps"
From Experience: I had a Dell Optiplex 755 that would continuously beep. After process of elimination, it turns out that it was the keyboard that was causing the continuous beeping.
- "Black screen with no error message"
- "Couldn't open drive multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)"
This occur at bootup. Try reseating the hard drive just in case it is due to the power cable or the ide or sata cable became loose. If the message persist, it is a sign that the hard drive is about to fail. In my situation, I was able to get the windows to load after many time having to force it to shutdown by pressing the power button. If you are able to do I suggest backup any data file and do not turn it off because it might not be able to load the OS again the next time. After that, I was unable to get the computer to load OS again which I deem the hard drive as fail hard drive.
- "Invalid partition table"
The program in the MBR displays these messages when it cannot find the active partition on the hard drive or the boot sector on that partition. Use the FDisk or Diskpart from a command prompt to check the hard drive partition table for error. Sometime fdisk /mbr solves the problem. Third-party recovery software such as PartitionMagic might help.
- "Non-System disk or disk error, press any key"
If you get any of these messages at startup, check to see if there is a floppy in the floppy drive or anything externally connected to the computer like USB stick, ZIP drive, or hard drive. If there are, remove it and restart your computer.
Note: Go into your CMOS and change the order of bootable device. Make sure the hard drive is the first device that the BIOS look at for the OS. Your computer will boot faster because the BIOS does not have to first look for OS somewhere else.
- "SQLDUMPER library failed initialization. Your installation is either corrupt or has been tampered with. Please uninstall then re-run setup to correct this problem."
This error usually occurs when Business Contact Management is removed along with the SQL server. To prevent the above error message from showing up everytime you shutdown your computer do the following:
Start|Run|Type Services.msc|disabled Microsoft SQL Server VSS Writer
- "Stop 0x0000007A or Kernel_Data_Inpage_Error"
There is a bad sector on the hard drive where the paging file is stored; there is a virus or defective RAM. Try running Chkdsk or Scandisk.
- Stop 0x00000077 or Kernel_Stack_Inpage_Error"
Bad sectors are on the hard drive, there is a hard drive hardware problem, or RAM is defective. Try running Chkdsk or, for the FAT file system, run Scandisk using a Windows 98 startup disk.
- "Stop 0x00000050 or Page_Fault_in_Nonpaged_Area"
Most likely RAM is defective.
- "Stop 0x0000007B or Inaccessible_Boot_Device"
There is a boot sector virus or failing hardware. Try Fdisk /mbr or fixmbr
- “The action could not be completed because the Microsoft Exchange Information Store service is unavailable. Be sure that the service is running and you have network connectivity to the Microsoft Exchange Server computer.
ID no: c1041721
Exchange System Manager
1. Start | Run | Type Services.msc
2. Look for “Microsoft Exchange Information Store”
3. Right-click and select Start
You should now be able to access the Mailbox