Had my PC plugged into a power strip for a second while rearranging my desk to fit the UPS. Of course the power goes out at that moment. I then got to enjoy the following issue and its troubleshooting process:
found solutions involving enabling ahci in bios. ahci was enabled, so:
1) boot unsuccessful in normal mode (blue screen with boot drive error)
2) drive visible in bios, but primary boot drive strangely set to large program ssd. fixed
3) boot unsuccessful in normal mode with same error; set to safe mode in troubleshooting options, restart:
- ahci boot successful in safe mode
- restart, enter bios,
switch to ide mode in sata settings, save and exit
- ide boot successful to normal mode
- facepalm
- admin command prompt:
bcdedit /set {current} safeboot minimal (safe mode trigger)
- restart, enter bios,
switch back to ahci mode in sata settings, save and exit
- ahci boot successful to safe mode
- admin command prompt:
bcdedit /deletevalue {current} safeboot (removes safe mode trigger)
- restart, ahci boot successful in normal mode
-
browser tabs all gone, like 90% half-finished youtube videos that I was definitely going to get to #reeee
Doesn't really feel like a Windows 10 problem so much as a me problem for having an improper shutdown. But it's weird to me that the solution to a problem I found written about very early in Win 10's life is still relevant.
Shahter wrote:
we moved to ltsc in a company i admin for to avoid that^ shit. yes, i know, it has limitations and compatibility issues, but once those are figured out and workarounds found, in our exoerience it's a solid choice for those who don't want to struggle with microsoft not giving a damn. migrated our 1.2k+ machines to it over the last year, no major issues yet.
I would be strongly tempted to move my company to Linux if users wouldn't completely lose their #*&.