SOURCE: Evo N200
The BIOS, which handles the initial start up of your computer, cannot find your hard drive and thus cannot boot your operating system (ie, Windows). Open up your computer and confirm the power cable is firmly connected to the hard drive and that the cable that connects the hard drive to the motherboard is firmly secure. If both of these check out, then try downloading this bootable CD on another computer. This CD, among other things, has a few hard drive utilities that will help further diagnose the problem. http://www.ultimatebootcd.com/ Finally, if the utilities on this CD are unable to see the hard drive itself, then is may need to be replaced. Try testing with another hard drive or another cable to connect it to the motherboard.
SOURCE: Trying to start my computer
http://www.hitachigst.com/hdd/support/download.htm has a Disc Fitness Test programme. It produces a floppy to boot from DOS into Windows. My Satellite 1110 has the same error message, PXE-E61. The BIOS shows "no HDD". The DTF found no fault on the HDD. (full test took 45minutes) Give it a try. I know, you need a working computer to down load it-- and DOS and a floppy drive on the faulty one. There are USB adaptors for floppy drives. Tomorrow I prise the 1110 apart and will clean all the cable and connectors. Good luck. Bryan
SOURCE: PXE MOF problem
First, try and access your cmos setup. Look to see if your harddrive shows up.
SOURCE: Intel(R) Boot Agent Version 4.1.06 Copyright (C)
your start up drivers is not coming up its eather deleted or vireuse has decaded them away reintall windows reboot disc.
SOURCE: I am having problems with
Wow, sounds like a no hd issue, your system does not know where your HD is
Press Alt F Alt E Alt B to force it start form the HD
If no chance, then you need to use a windows CD to try to repair the partition.
Hope this helps
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