![System32 drivers pci.sys download System32 drivers pci.sys download](/uploads/1/2/6/3/126300494/337332156.jpg)
Copy cd: i386 ntfs.sys drive: windows system32 drivers. Where cd is the drive letter for the CD-ROM drive that has your Windows XP CD and drive is the drive where you installed Windows XP (most likely C:). Now go ahead and remove the CD and type quit. Restart your computer and see if you are able to log back into Windows! Pci.sys is located in the C:WindowsSystem32drivers folder. Known file sizes on Windows 10/8/7/XP are 149,480 bytes (33% of all occurrences), 68,224 bytes.
Accountants computer screwed up last night. Guess the power surged or went out for a minute. When she started up her computer this morning it was saying
Searched on google, was told to go into the recover console and type:
Did that. Got back
Reboot the computer and get the same error msg......
So I tried to a chkdsk thinking something might be up with the hdd. Doesn't find any errors. I pulled all the PCI cards, re-did the expand thing and still get the same result.
Any other suggestions? I really don't want to have to do a complete reformat. I HATE reinstalling Quick Books.
EDIT/UPDATE:
I read somewhere on a forum online that someone had an issue with the RAM causing this issue so I ran memtest all last night w/o any errors. (Made it through like 12 passes)
I tried booting in Ubuntu live CD and replacing the pci.sys file manually with one from another computer and still the same issue. So I'm guess that is not really something wrong with the pci.sys file but something else is wrong in there. Just have to idea what....
Searched on google, was told to go into the recover console and type:
Did that. Got back
Reboot the computer and get the same error msg......
So I tried to a chkdsk thinking something might be up with the hdd. Doesn't find any errors. I pulled all the PCI cards, re-did the expand thing and still get the same result.
Any other suggestions? I really don't want to have to do a complete reformat. I HATE reinstalling Quick Books.
EDIT/UPDATE:
I read somewhere on a forum online that someone had an issue with the RAM causing this issue so I ran memtest all last night w/o any errors. (Made it through like 12 passes)
I tried booting in Ubuntu live CD and replacing the pci.sys file manually with one from another computer and still the same issue. So I'm guess that is not really something wrong with the pci.sys file but something else is wrong in there. Just have to idea what....