Jim5coat
Sun Aug 31 13:06:00 PDT 2008
Thanks for the suggestions I will try them in the AM. 10 hours of messing
with this stuff today is about all I can handle. Though it appears I have
narrowed the issue down to the explorer.exe missing issue. It's like the
file allocation table may have gotten hit because the system just doesn't
recognize the file even though it's there.
--
Jim 5coat
"Malke" wrote:
> Jim 5coat wrote:
>
> > Had a virus attack and have cleaned it using McAfee including a full scan
> > in
> > DOS safe mode. No infected files are on the disk based on the scans.
> > When I start the PC in ?normal mode? the desktop displays but the start
> > menu nor
> > the task bar display. Even when I use the windows key. Right clicks on
> > the
> > desk top do not work. I normally do not have icons on my desktop so I do
> > not know if other programs work.
> >
> > In the safe mode I have attempted to run
> > windows explorer and the system says in can not find explorer.exe even
> > though I can see it in the windows directory using the DOS dir command.
> >
> > I have attempted to do the sfc /scannow process but got the following
> > error
> > message "windows file protection could not initiate a scan of protected
> > system files.
> > The specific error code is 0x000006ba (The RPC server is unavailable.].
> >
> > I have reviewed what is running in the Task Manager and notice that
> > explorer.exe is not running and expect it has something to do with the
> > fact the system can't find explorer.exe for some reason.
>
> I very much doubt that your computer is still clean. McAfee is really
> dreadful and in any case won't catch a lot of malware.
>
> Go through these general malware removal steps systematically -
>
http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/page2.html#Removing_Malware
>
> Include scanning with David Lipman's Multi_AV and follow instructions to do
> all scans in Safe Mode.
>
>
http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/page2.html#Multi-AV - instructions
>
http://tinyurl.com/yoeru3 - download link and more instructions
>
> When all else fails, get guided help. Choose one of the specialty forums
> listed at the first link. Register and read its posting FAQ. PLEASE DO NOT
> POST LOGS IN THE MS NEWSGROUPS.
>
> Or your operating system may have been so damaged that a clean install is
> required.
>
> Standard disclaimer: I can't see and test your computer myself, so these are
> just suggestions based on many years of being a professional computer tech;
> suggestions based on what you've written. You should not take my
> suggestions as a definitive diagnosis. If you can't do the work yourself
> (and there is no shame in admitting this isn't your cup of tea), take the
> machine to a professional computer repair shop (not your local equivalent
> of BigComputerStore/GeekSquad). Please be aware that not all local shops
> are skilled at removing malware and even if they are, your computer may be
> so infested that Windows will need to be clean-installed. If possible, have
> all your data backed up before you take the machine into a shop.
>
> Malke
> --
> MS-MVP
> Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic!
> FAQ -
http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ
>
>