I thought one of my hard drives had failed.
Will getting rid of iTunes and QuickTime fix this? If not, what do I have to do to restore my computer to full health?
If it's the same as what happened to Shaun's PC at Empeg when he tried to play Quicktime files under Vista, then what's going on is that your RAID controller
also mistakenly thinks that one of the drives has failed. You need to go into the BIOS and tell it that the drive is OK really; it wasn't me doing this so I can't give any more precise instructions. Then once it's rebuilt the RAID, you should go and find updated RAID controller drivers, probably on Intel's website, as it's the RAID driver which was doing the Wrong Thing. You'll need to know exactly what chipset your motherboard has; under XP you can find this in Device Manager under "System devices" (my laptop says Intel 82801BAM/82815), but they probably hid it somewhere else in Vista.
I'd
love to know what the underlying bug was here; it seems crazy that one particular multimedia codec can cause a read pattern that makes a RAID driver fall over, or that a RAID driver has so much state space that it can't be thoroughly tested, and such bugs found, before release.
Peter