Could Not Initialize Ui Subsystem Windows Home Server Setup Error
(Nederlands)Polska (Polski)România (Română)Singapore (English)Türkiye (Türkçe)Россия (Русский)ישראל (עברית)المملكة العربية السعودية (العربية)ไทย (ไทย)대한민국 (한국어)中华人民共和国 (中文)台灣 (中文)日本 (日本語)香港特別行政區 (中文) Microsoft Home Ask a question Quick access Forums home Browse forums users FAQ Search related threads Remove From My Forums Answered by: Could not initialize UI subsystem Windows Home Server > Windows Home Server Hardware and Installation Question 0 Sign in to vote Here's my setup:* Dell PowerEdge 2400 - RAID backplane disconnected - RAID and onboard SCSI turned off in Bios - 2x 866 P3 - 1G RAM - Onboard video ATI Rage S3 - 4MB* Promise SATA controller* ASUS SATA DVD* 2x Seagate 320MB SATA drivesI'm getting the error in the subject. I get to the blue-green Vista-like background, and then I get that message. After reading threads that suggest that this problem can be caused by a bad burn, I downloaded imgburn and burned w/ verification at a low speed. Same problem. Ideas? Tuesday, April 03, 2007 4:45 AM Answers 1 Sign in to vote If you need to use F6 to install drivers, you will need two sets of drivers for WHS. You'll need Vista drivers the first time you're prompted for them, then the second time you'll need W2K3 drivers the second time. Marked as answer by Jonas Svensson -FST-Microsoft employee Saturday, January 24, 2009 9:55 PM Tuesday, April 03, 2007 2:40 PM Moderator All replies 0 Sign in to vote Update your BIOS on your motherboard and update the firmware in the RAID. I'd recommend using your on board controllers and removing your RAID devices if possible. Tuesday, April 03, 2007 5:32 AM Moderator 0 Sign in to vote Thanks - I'll try updating the BIOS.To clarif
Latest News 35 By Philip Churchill on June 13th, 2007 Avoid Setup Errors As reported from posters at Microsoft's WHS Forum the WHS setup can fail will all sorts of errors where the root cause was either a corrupted download, an unverified burn of a DVD/CD, poor quality media, mismatched media (e.g. DVD-R used in a DVD+R drive) or malfunctioning CD/DVD-ROM readers. In the previous Beta 2 and CTP releases the bootable setup DVD was changed from using the XP generation https://social.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/802cb790-c9e5-4acc-9095-d1fb65d8f54f/could-not-initialize-ui-subsystem?forum=whshardware WinPE, to the Vista generation WinPE (WinPE 2.0). It appears that WinPE 2.0 is more susceptible to media failures than the older generation was. This could be due to its much greater memory requirements or the way data is laid out. So what can you do to make sure that your install is error free? Use a CRC check http://www.mswhs.com/2007/06/avoid-setup-errors/ utility to verify the ISO file you downloaded was not corrupted. I use the FREE HashCalc. My Windows Home Server RC - Installation DVD.iso with the correct CRC32 These are the CRC32 Checksum Value's (Meaning it was generated using the CRC32 algorithm). Make sure that they match. If not then part of the download is corrupted SO re-download. Windows Home Server RC - Home Computer Restore CD.iso = 0x103F20B6 Windows Home Server RC - Connector Software CD.iso = 0xF7B64B77 Windows Home Server RC - Installation DVD.iso = 0x3E3EBF25 Use a DVD burning software package that supports verification (e.g. DO NOT use dvdburn.exe). If you use Nero, make sure you turn on the data verify option on the page before you start the burn. If instead you use my favourite Asampoo Burning Studio make sure that you "Change Options" from the "Burn a CD/DVD/Blue-ray Disc from a Disc Image" menu to allow the verify option also. Another good FREE program is ImgBurn, just make sure again that Verify is ticked. Do not burn your media (especia
Help Receive Real-Time Help Create a Freelance Project Hire for a Full Time Job Ways to Get Help Ask a Question Ask for Help Receive Real-Time Help Create a Freelance Project Hire https://www.experts-exchange.com/questions/24558752/Windows-Home-server-install-error-failure-to-initizlize-UI-subsystem.html for a Full Time Job Ways to Get Help Expand Search Submit Close Search Login Join Today Products BackProducts Gigs Live Careers Vendor Services Groups Website Testing Store Headlines Experts Exchange https://gorails.com/setup/windows > Questions > Windows Home server install error: failure to initizlize UI subsystem Want to Advertise Here? Solved Windows Home server install error: failure to initizlize UI subsystem Posted on 2009-07-09 could not MS Server Apps 1 Verified Solution 3 Comments 952 Views Last Modified: 2012-05-07 When trying to install Windows Home Server the install stops with the error message: "failure to initialize UI subsystem". I don't know what that problem is or how to fix it. Can anyone help? 0 Question by:dskemp Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Google LVL 7 Best Solution byPhateon 1. Use wired could not initialize mouse and keyboard 2. Install using only one drive. Add other drives after installation is complete. 3. Try another (new) dvd drive. 4. Set drives to ide mode in BIOS. 5. Set bios setting Go to Solution 3 Comments LVL 7 Overall: Level 7 Message Expert Comment by:Phateon2009-07-10 Most of the times, these error messages are caused due to faulty media and/or hardware. Please let us know your current set up. 0 LVL 7 Overall: Level 7 Message Accepted Solution by:Phateon2009-07-10 1. Use wired mouse and keyboard 2. Install using only one drive. Add other drives after installation is complete. 3. Try another (new) dvd drive. 4. Set drives to ide mode in BIOS. 5. Set bios setting to default. 6. If all of these fail ask for replacement install media from your supplier. 0 Message Author Closing Comment by:dskemp2009-07-16 Thanks for the help. I had set the system to RAID 1, so I had to disconnect the second hard drive and reset the BIOS to IDE. That did the trick. 0 Write Comment First Name Please enter a first name Las
Logs with LogRotate Setting Up Rails 4 with MongoDB and Mongoid Using Vagrant for Rails Development Community Pricing Login Sign Up Home Screencasts Community Account Overview Linux Subsystem Installing Ruby Configuring Git Installing Rails Setting Up MySQL Setting Up PostgreSQL Final Steps Watch the latest screencast Direct Messages in Realtime with ActionCable Setup Ruby On Rails on Windows 10 A guide to setting up a Ruby on Rails development environment Windows 10 Mac OS X Ubuntu This guide is a work in progress as the new Bash on Ubuntu on Windows Linux Subsystem is in beta. There is a lot of functionality not implemented yet so you'll find that, while the basics might work, some of the more advanced and complex things won't. Overview This will take about 45 minutes. We will be setting up a Ruby on Rails development environment on Windows 10. The reason we're going to be using Bash on Ubuntu on Windows because it allows you to run Linux on your Windows machine. Most Ruby on Rails tutorials and dependencies work best on Linux, so this allows you to get the best of both worlds. A Windows machine for your day to day work, and a Linux subsystem for Ruby on Rails development. This only works on 64-bit installations of Windows. This is also in beta, so this won't be nearly as robust as running a Linux virtual machine, but it can definitely do the basics well enough. Installing the Linux Subsystem for Windows Bash on Ubuntu on Windows is the name for the Linux Subsystem that's in beta right now for Windows. It allows you to run Linux on Windows without having to run a VM. Right now, this update is only available to those on the "Fast" option in the Windows Insider program. You'll want to join the Windows Insider program and set your Insider level to "Fast". Here's how you can join the Windows Insider program. The first step is to enable "Developer mode" in Windows. You can do this by opening up Settings and navigating to to Update & Security, then "For Developers". Click the "Developer mode" option to enable it. Now we need to enable to Windows Subsystem for Linux. You can do this by opening Control Panel, going to Programs, and then clicking "Turn Windows Features On or Off". Looking for the "Windows Subsystem for Linux" option a