Yeah, well I only did about 2 minutes of searching, but from the sounds of it, it might be best to reinstall your OS. Hope you created a ghost! Reimage the beast if so!
This can be the result of several problems:
1. You are using a 40 conductor cable instead of an 80 conductor UDMA/ATA100/133 ribbon cable... and is the most common cause.
2.The file systems is damaged and cannot be mounted or booted. A repair install or a full format and reinstall may be required.
3. The BIOS settings are configured for the faster UDMA drive, and you are using a slower drive. Load the Fail-Safe settings then reactivate the most frequently used options such as USB support.
If the second parameter (0xbbbbbbbb) of the Stop error is 0xC0000032, then the file system is damaged. Usually you can repair this by restarting your computer to the Repair Console, then use chkdsk /r to repair the volume. Once you have repaired the volume, carefully inspect your hardware to determine the reason for the file system damage.
Edit: Could I ask what you were doing before this happened?
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