Configuration Code Purple Error
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Hp Pavillion Code Purple
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Windows with Microsoft, and you're done. At worst I've occasionally had to call Microsoft because the online activation didn't go through - but it's always a simple process and the MS folks erreur configuration systeme code purple are very helpful. But recently, I encountered a business practice that blew me away
Code Purple Fix
and soured me on a company I've always thought highly of and frequently recommend to my clients. A customer brought
Your System Has Detected A Configuration Error Code Purple
in a HP Pavilion desktop (p6110y w/Vista) with a dead motherboard. They had purchased a new laptop and we grabbed the data off the old computer. But they still wanted the desktop operational and http://h30434.www3.hp.com/t5/Desktop-Operating-Systems-and-Recovery/Code-Purple-Error-Help/td-p/359373 wiped clean, so we ordered a refurbished motherboard for it, installed it, and ran the factory install from the recovery partition on the HD. When it finished, the system rebooted and I saw this: Puzzled, I tried the recovery reinstall again. Same result. Before I was sitting in a call queue to HP, I did a little research, and found that HP was not playing fair… My first https://fixedit.itxpress.biz/2013/10/30/hps-code-purple-configuration-error/ find was this thread about someone trying to replace the motherboard on their HP. While the original poster had apparently used a non HP motherboard replacement, other people posting had used HP motherboards and one even had *HP* repair the computer (presumably using HP parts) and they encountered the error. That person was told to ship the system back due to a ‘firmware' issue. Riiiiight. My next find had similar advice, always use an HP motherboard (which I had done - it was an exact HP part number match to the failed one!). If you got this error - use a retail DVD to install Windows and no problem - but that's such a hassle compared to a recovery partition install. Then someone said something about a ‘check' directory and if you removed that, the problem went away. Hmmm. Finally I found the true answer here. On an HP forum, someone posted a way to fix it by changing a script in an HP post install directory. But WHY did that fix it? The 2nd thread I linked too had the link I needed: http://www.billoblog.com/?p=152 Between the original post and many updates in the comments, the purpose of this message was reveled - t
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