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hammerYou have three different threads outlining *significant* problems that you are having with your system: this one here,
Error Message: Reboot and select proper boot device, and
Can't boot from WIN XP CD, pls help!!!
Several points--by the way--don't take this *personally*, I'm not trying to be negative--I'm trying to help here!:
1. There have been several suggestions made on how to help the situation--I've seen no response from you indicating that you tried those, and whether they helped or not.
I've only seen a new thread show up outlining more *fixes* that you have attempted and new problems.
2. Regarding *more fixes* that you have tried--I do not have the feeling you are attempting all the various *fixes* with purposeful pre-thought. If the utility says something about *booting* you have tried it.
Your first post indicated being *trapped in Ghost virtual partition*--there is a fairly easy fix for that, and you can get around the problem in the future using Ghost--but, by the time you posted here, it looks like you had already done multiple *fixes*--but, if you don't know what problem you are trying to fix--running random fixes is fraught with unintended results!
3. Again, regarding *more fixes*--we see the ones you have mentioned--but I highly suspect that you may have done possibly many more in between your posts that are not being mentioned--it's probably unlikely anyone can really know what the current status of your system is!
4.
Quote:i want to bypass this, a si believe the current installation of windows which i currently have on the HD is in working order.
Why do you think this?
I there a reason you want to *save* this install of WinXP?
Personally, given the degree of uncertainty about the various effects the various *fixes* have introduced--I would take a deep breath, consider everything I've done as a *learning experience* of what to avoid in the future--and start over--which is what Brian and Rad have suggested earlier in this thread.
If you want to *save* this install of WinXP--you could possibly let the install program run to the end--let it over-write the current WinXP install--it will just overwrite the files that are already there!--or you could have the install procedure do a *parallel* install, have it install a second copy of WinXP to a different sub-directory--it can later be uninstalled and files deleted! You will have to adjust a few startup files--but should be doable.
But, you should *slow down*, do one step at a time, one change at a time, research the problem and the suggested fixes before proceeding--and only proceed if there's a specific reason to believe that the procedure actually relates to the problem you are attempting to resolve!
Let us know what the status of you system is and how thing have worked out!