![]() From what I could find on the Internet, Windows complaining about that file really means that something else is broken. The reference to bootres.dll being broken is apparently not really relevant. To see the file in Notepad like this, just enter the name of the file as a command in Windows CMD, and it will open in Notepad. Looking at the contents of the srttrail file I did find something rather interesting: Screenshot of the srttrail.txt file that revealed the problem. It gave me a bad feeling, but there was nothing to be done about it. To do this, I clicked through the Windows startup repair screen to advanced options, eventually ending up with the screen where you can launch a CMD.EXE:Īt this point, I thought it was a bit disconcerting that my C: bootdrive has been put at D:, and the D: data drive was at C. The key when this message shows up is to actually look at the contents of the log file ( C|D:\windows\system32\logfiles\Srt\SrtTrail.txt) to see which problems that it lists. The next morning, I went through the whole repair loop again, ending up with a message like this (except that in this case the path pointed to D:) Windows 10 repair screen, just like the one I hit I was not willing to give up just quite yet, however… reading various blogs and discussion threads long into the night, an idea started to form. ![]() Clearly, something was really broken in my Windows installation. At this point, I was considering wiping the machine and starting over. Restore point – but that failed: Failing to restore to a previous system restore point, error 0x80070003 (whatever that means)įollowing threads like this, I tried “ bootrec.exe” in a few ways, to no effect. I went to the advanced options and tried rolling back to a previous system ![]() I tried a few rounds of repair and reboot, but nothing helped. I downloaded CUDA version 10, installed, and the machine rebooted into the Windows 10 automatic repair mode. When trying to run the code the first time, I got some rather strange errors that I finally figured out meant that I was missing the CUDA toolkit. I had the setup working on the desktop already, and copied the code over to the laptop. ![]() The GTX 1060 in the laptop is just as powerful as my home desktop machine, and should run Tensorflow and Keras well. I had bought the laptop in order to have something portable with sufficient performance to actually do convolutional neural network (CNN) training and inference “on the road”. Late last year I was trying to do some machine learning work on my brand new Alienware 15 R4 gaming laptop. ![]()
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