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February 22, 2002

Error Messages Should Contain Help not Panic

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One day last week, I completed my work at the office and told my Windows XP notebook to hibernate, as I do at the end of every work day. Rather than hibernating, the notebook sat idle while displaying the "Preparing to hibernate" message. I gave the laptop about 10 minutes to complete the hibernation process (the laptop usually takes about 2 minutes to hibernate and shut down), and when the process didn't complete, I pulled the plug on the system.

I rebooted the system so that I could check the hibernation properties for any clues about what might have caused this problem. The computer churned for a while, displayed the "Loading Windows XP" screen, and then crashed, giving me an "UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME" error message. I didn't panic; I just rebooted into safe mode.

Watching the system boot in safe mode let me observe the boot process as it loaded the necessary files to make XP run. All the files loaded, then the computer crashed again with the same "UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME" error message.

A search of Microsoft's Web site returned a link to the support article "'STOP 0x000000ED UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME' Error Message During Windows XP Upgrade". The article attributed this error to either a cabling problem or (in my case) an NTFS problem.

I booted the laptop with the XP CD-ROM, launched the Recovery Console, and ran Chkdsk /r (repair) on the boot drive. The repair operation took 45 minutes (on my 32GB hard disk with 20GB free), and my notebook booted successfully with no apparent data loss.

So, why am I telling you all this? My reason for sharing this story isn't to inform you about the problem (which turned out to be simple to fix), but to comment about a statement near the end of the Microsoft article: "This behavior is by design." If Microsoft recognizes the problem, why doesn't the company automate the fix, or at least provide an error message that includes information about the problem or fix? The average user will see the cryptic "STOP 0x000000ED UNMOUNTABLE_BOOT_VOLUME" message and panic. I realize that not every system problem has an easy answer, but when the problem is a recognized error with a simple solution, the OS should present the solution to the user, not hide it online.

End of Article



Reader Comments
They don't have an easy answer displayed because it's supposedly also an anti piracy system to stop people from installing new copies of Windows.

Personally, I think it's rediculous, I've been dealing with this error on one of my systems for going on five months now with no luck. The only real luck is two other functioning computers to search for help with.

I'm sincerely hoping microsoft will put out an easy hoot disk to help with it or something as I've tried everything I can think of. The recovery console not being an option as it gives me this error prior to the recover console showing up.

Anonymous User November 04, 2004


By Design, to prevent the system boot to OS, the error code is to let you know why, They cannot possibly "preload" every fix for every foreseen or unforeseen error. Most of the machines I have fixed with this error was caused by virus/adware. It has nothing (if any at all) to do with ant-piracy, it is simply for YOUR protection of YOUR data and security, also you can easily reinstall and OS over it. Furhtermore, if you have been "dealing with this error on one of your systems for going on five months now with no luck" then I suggest you take it to someone that knows how to fix it because you obviously shouldn't be attempting such.

Anonymous User March 16, 2005 (Article Rating: )


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