
We listened to hours of country to pick out the 23 best lyrics about driving. And now that summer’s here, you can finally roll down your windows, turn the music up, and belt your heart out to your favorite country tunes. For Windows 7, you can use the boot disk’s System Recovery options.There are at least one million country songs about driving down a red dirt road, sitting in the back of the truck, or getting behind the wheel for the first time. On a Windows 7 or Vista computer you can usually just hit F8 to bring up Safe Mode and the other tools, but if you’re using Windows 8 you’ll need to get into Safe Mode a different way.įor Windows 8 you can go to Troubleshoot > Advanced Options and then you’ll find the option to go into System Restore. RELATED: How to Boot Into Safe Mode on Windows 10 or 8 (The Easy Way)Įven though you can use System Restore from regular Windows itself, you’re much better off using it from Safe Mode, or from the installation disk’s repair options.


If you aren’t able to get your PC to even boot into Safe Mode, or uninstalling the update doesn’t seem to fix the problem, the one surefire way that you can make your PC start working again is by using System Restore to put things back to a working state. Once you’ve selected it, you can uninstall just like before. If you aren’t sure what update caused the problem, you can obviously look at the dates on the updates, or you can use the little drop-down selector on the “Installed On” column to select only the updates that were installed on a particular date or range, which can be really helpful in identifying the problem. Then you can select the problematic update and click the Uninstall button.
