BSOD Virus Recovery
After a virus removal, your computer may BSOD on the next boot due to registry changes that the virus made. Windows is looking at a corrupt registry, and it may point to a virus-infected file that was removed. At this point, restoring to the earliest registry backup on the system can be a quick fix.
Update: Thanks, drew010 for suggesting the Ultimate Boot CD‘s Registry Restore Wizard: “It just looks for registry backups taken by system restore and in two clicks allows you to restore the registry to any available restore date. It has saved me many times.”
Take a look at the registry restore wizard program available on the Ultimate Boot CD For Windows.
It just looks for registry backups taken by system restore and in two clicks allows you to restore the registry to any available restore date. It has saved me many times.
Thanks, drew010 – I update the blog with your comment.