If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!
I have been getting an error box popping up lately that says “Windows – No Disk” and then in the box something like Exception Processing Message c0000013 Parameters 75b6bf9c 475b6bf9c 75b6bf9c. At first I thought it was only happening when i was playing EVE and trying to click on stuff in game. I just uninstalled EVE w/the intention of reinstalling it to fix the problem. After I uninstalled it, I decided it would be a good time to run Spybot and Adaware. I open Spybot and as soon as it starts its scan, the message pops up again. Luckily when it did it then I was able to close Spybot and get the message to go away. When it happens when I’m playing EVE it freezes my computer and I have to reboot it manually.
How do I fix this problem?
well I just found this http://www.consumingexperience.com/2007/11/windows-no-disk-exception-processing.html
I just changed all of my removable media to different drive letters. For some reason when the guy that put my computer together did it, the main HDD came up as drive H: and we couldnt figure out why. One of my removable media drives has been listed as drive C:. After changing the lettering, i reopened spybot and didnt have the same problem, so either i fixed it or it will take something else to trigger it. In which case I will probably get a new HDD like Paul suggests (thanks btw).
Your machine is having problems reading or writing to its hard drive. This is a classic symptom of a disk drive beginning to fail, due to internal hardware problems (typically, because areas of the disk platter magnetic coating are flaking off the spinning platters, rendering areas of the disk useless for reading and writing data).
You can try correcting errors in the disk file system by running the chkdsk utility, but that may or may not correct problems with a disk which has developed many errors. Type chkdsk /f /r in the Run box, and the machine will run chkdsk during your next reboot.
You’ll probably need to transfer your installation to a new hard disk, using a disk cloning or migration kit. Don’t wait! And don’t screw around too long trying repair tools, as you can substantially advance the failure of a drive with platter problems by using some kinds of repair software, which try, repeatedly, to recover data from bad sectors by re-reading them many times. This forces the disk head over areas where the magnetic coating is already rough, or flaked away, risking head crashes and greater contamination.