![]() ![]() When a startup problem is detected, the Startup Repair Tool will launch an automated, diagnostics-based troubleshooter that requires little, if any, user intervention, and in many cases it will resuscitate an unbootable system. What makes this tool stand out among its brethren is that it is designed to intercede at the first hint of an operating system startup problem. One of the many troubleshooting features in Windows 7 is a utility called the Startup Repair Tool. ![]() Not so with Windows 7's Startup Repair Tool! Of course there were many other operating system native tools, but they all involved a manual, user-initiated operation. For example, in Windows NT we had the Emergency Recovery Utility, in Windows 2000 we had the Recovery Console, and in Windows XP we had System Restore, just to mention a few. We've all encountered startup problems with previous version of the Windows operating system, and Microsoft has always provided us with lots of tools for fixing those problems. ![]()
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