@lukipela: Don't have a recovery CD, this laptop came with all that stuff on a partition on the HDD.
Stuff: You might try repairing a second time by powering your computer on and tapping the F8 key repeatedly as it boots up until the advanced boot options are displayed. Use the arrow keys to select "Repair your computer" and press Enter. Usually requires the Windows disk and some advanced knowledge of system repair IIRC. See attached Win7Repair image.
But . . . this may be the safest way . . .
While in Safe Mode, see if you can do a "System Restore" to a point prior to the problem. When I say System Restore I mean the MS system restore utility that comes with Windows not the manufactures system restore. The interface is usually under Programs - Accessories - System Tools - System Restore or similar depending on your setup. That should put you back to the same system you had at that particular restore point. I've had great luck using this utility. I would choose a restore point at least a day before the problem occurred. As a rule of thumb I usually check Windows update after using a restore point in case any security updates were done after that restore point.
If that doesn't work you can use the manufacturers system restore which may or may not give you the option to do a destructive / non-destructive restore depending on the manufacturer. A non-destructive repair will not delete your files but will require you to reinstall program other than the ones that came with the system. Usually there is an F key shown of the first startup page that will allow you to enter the restore utility. If you don't see the F key for the restore utility displayed you can do a Google search for the F key that allows you to restore for the manufacturer of your computer. For instance, I believe Gateway and HP's restore activates by pressing F-11on the start screen.
If you made the manufactures restore disk (most ppl don't) you can also boot to that disk and restore from it. You may have to go into your BIOS and set the computer to boot from the CD / DVD drive if it is not the first bootable drive.
After you get your system up and running, if you didn't make the one time manufacturers restore disk . . . I would suggest you make one as it is the only way to restore you system if the hard drive fails (other than ordering the disk from the manufacturer)
Good luck . . . =)
Edit: Cleanup usually means it completed the process and is cleaning up after itself, looks like the cleanup process failed to complete.
Thanks for the detailed post, but unfortunately that doesn't help very much.
1)
I've gotten into the advanced boot menu already, no repair option is there anymore.
2)
I did a System Restore via the advanced boot options menu (after repair failed way back then, i was offered other options, Restore and Reset Factory Defaults among them) before i did a System Recovery/non-destructive Factory Reset and i choose the last restore point which had happened 3 days ago and it didn't help. I kept getting booted straight into repair, when that failed i was prompted and reboot and then thrown back into repair. After this is when i did the factory reset. Attempting another one is not possible because there are no Restore Points available.
3)
Attempting the secondary system restore you outline can only be done i believe by going to All Programs > eMachines > eMachines Recovery Management. And then choosing Recovery Option from within the menu that pops up. All that does is reboot the system and nothing else.
Thanks!
I also getting a window after the BSoD that says.
Windows has recovered from an unexpected shutdown.
Windows can check online for a solution to the problem.
Problem signature:
Problem Event Name: BlueScreen
OS Version: 6.1.7600.2.0.0.768.3
Locale ID: 1033
Additional information about the problem:
BCCode: 1e
BCP1: FFFFFFFFC0000096
BCP2: FFFFF8000289D00A
BCP3: 0000000000000000
BCP4: 0000000000000000
OS Version: 6_1_7600
Service Pack: 0_0
Product: 768_1
Files that help describe the problem:
C:\Windows\Minidump\060111-29733-01.dmp
C:\Users\<user name>\AppData\Local\Temp\WER-75364-0.sysdata.xml
Read our privacy statement online:
http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?linkid=104288&clcid=0x0409 If the online privacy statement is not available, please read our privacy statement offline:
C:\Windows\system32\en-US\erofflps.txt