Skip to comments.
HELP! Can I save my hard drive(and an anti-liberal library)?
I made a big computer mistake ^
| 3/30/02
| Myself
Posted on 03/30/2002 12:37:32 PM PST by Diddle E. Squat
click here to read article
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-48 next last
To: Diddle E. Squat
To quote Mr. Blutarsky: "If I were you, I'd start drinking heavily!"
2
posted on
03/30/2002 12:40:47 PM PST
by
Pokey78
To: Diddle E. Squat
Buy yourself a new hard disk and install it as a primary. Then reinstall your OS on the new disk. Make your current hard disk the secondary and you should be able to access it as the "D:" drive. Copy your data from the D: drive back to the C: drive.
3
posted on
03/30/2002 12:42:42 PM PST
by
zchip
To: Diddle E. Squat
If you have a start up floppy, insert that before boot to get to the dos prompt(you might be able to do a safe mode start by pressing a function key- often, but not always, the f7 key) and copy files from the DOS prompt to other floppies.
You can also go to MS help site to get specific help for Windows ME.
4
posted on
03/30/2002 12:45:24 PM PST
by
Helix
To: Diddle E. Squat
Everyone should have a spare hard drive or two lying around. You may beg an old one from a friend or computer shop. Say an old 3 gigabyte one.
One way to solve your problem is take out your hard drive. Put in another one and load your e-machine restore disk onto it. Then put in your ailing hard drive as a slave hard drive. Once you are up and running with these teo hard drives you can drag the files you want to keep onto the master hard drive. When you're finished take out both hard drives and do your complete re-install on your ailing hard drive.
5
posted on
03/30/2002 12:47:43 PM PST
by
dennisw
To: Diddle E. Squat
If you have another OS, like a previous version (98, 2000, 95, NT, whatever) try and install that on your machine as a dual boot machine, if possible. Don't know if it would work or not... so, that being the case, I'd get a new hard drive as suggested above, and make your current master drive a slave, with the new drive the master...
In the meantime, start drinking heavily :0)
To: Diddle E. Squat
This is not gospel,(I'm a UNIX guy, not a Windows guy), so do not act on this unless someone else can verify:
I have re-installed both Windows 98 and Windows 2000 from the ground up and the computer has told me that I will lose all data. But that has not happened. My guess is that since I was re-installing the OS, the old data on the hard-drive was still visible after the install. Had I been switching to a new File System on new OS, I'm sure I would have lost it all.
For the future: burning data on to a CD is excellent protection against system crashes. It won't help you recover a lost system but most systems become obsolete so quickly that (IMO) struggling to recover a lost system is not worth it. But data is different. So long as I have my data on a CD, I don't much care what happens to the computer.
To: zchip
Buy yourself a new hard disk and install it as a primary. Then reinstall your OS on the new disk. Make your current hard disk the secondary and you should be able to access it as the "D:" drive. Copy your data from the D: drive back to the C: drive. I concur. Safest way to retreive your data. There will be instructions on the top of both the new and old drives about setting the jumpers to master and slave. New disk should be the master, old one should be the slave. Depending on what operating system you're installing, you may have to use F-Disk to set up a partition on the new drive and mark it 'active'.
My apologies if you already know all of this...
8
posted on
03/30/2002 12:49:03 PM PST
by
Riley
To: zchip
Yep, if there are no backups this is as good a plan as any.
I don't know about Windows Millenium edition, so I can't say whether or not the explorer.exe file could be extracted from a .CAB file or not without doing a complete re-install. I got burned out on supporting windoze a couple of years ago, so I haven't kept up.
How many versions of Windoze are out there now? Too many if you ask me.
To: Diddle E. Squat
Several things:
Are you running a virus checker? That webpage may have given you a trojan or worm virus.
If you haven't already done so, shut your machine completely off (not reboot). Then turn it back on, and see if it will load Windows.
I'm not sure with WinME, but do you have a "start up floppy"? With Win98 and previous versions, you can boot from the floppy. That way, you could at least copy your files you need to save onto floppies.
Is your hard drive partitioned? If it is partitioned, you could copy your "keep files" temporarily onto the partition drive that is the non-Windows drive.
10
posted on
03/30/2002 12:49:39 PM PST
by
TomGuy
To: Diddle E. Squat
My suggestions are found in posts #3 and #4, but once you get your 'puter back in order I'd look at backing up your valuable docs with a CDR, ZIP drive, etc. In fact, if you use the suggestion in post #3 you can always use that second drive for backups.
11
posted on
03/30/2002 12:49:51 PM PST
by
randog
To: zchip
Agree completely, Chip ... Had a similar problem, bit the bullet and got a secondary hard drive, and that did the trick -- plus, now I can't imagine what I did without all that extra storage space! It's a great investment, crisis or not ... Good luck, Diddle E.!
To: Diddle E. Squat
I have one of the 40 Gig Buslink external hard drives that I store all my data on. Key data is also dropped into 650 meg files for CD burning of the data as it's now cheapest and best for my needs as a back up to the external hard drive and the one in the laptop.
Keeps my puter running fast and uncluttered pretty much and if I get slammed like you did with some dll I don't want and "restore" in ME won't work then I just reload the configuration disk and start fresh. A custom CD burned with all my key programs like popup killer, anti-virus from grisoft (free), ZoneAlarm pro, and etc etc etc lets me recustomize the laptop fast if such happens.
Just my CYA suggestions that have worked for me........I had to lose a lot of key data also before I took action to prevent such loss.
Hope ya win yer battle !
Stay Safe !
13
posted on
03/30/2002 12:56:55 PM PST
by
Squantos
To: Diddle E. Squat
For Heaven's sake let the scandisk finish! A normal boot should proceed from there. You can create problems with the boot sequence when you keep interrupting it. When it finishes, let the system boot and let it install the Comet Cursor. Worry about that crap later. What would you prefer? Comet Cursor on a functioning system or the piece if sh!t you have now?
To: randog
ditto,i use zip drives 100MB (iomega)and can storage lots of stuff and my hardrive stays fast and free.
To: Diddle E. Squat
Since you have Windows ME, you could try holding down the f8 key while booting, and choose to go into safe mode, where you can try to restore your computer settings to an earlier date. This has saved me a couple of times. Earlier versions of Windows do not have that feature.
To: TomGuy
"Is your hard drive partitioned? " How exactly do you run Windows on a drive that isn't? You can't install jacksh-t on a drive that isn't partitioned.
To: Bloody Sam Roberts
Most drives from the factory are a single partition - C.
You can partition it further, such as D, E, F, etc.
Windows can be installed on any existing partition, although C is the most common. Usually Windows (98 and previous) ignores the other partitions and the data on them.
The point is, if there are more than just the C partition, and Windows is on the C partition, the data can be moved to a temporary location on another partition.
18
posted on
03/30/2002 1:09:47 PM PST
by
TomGuy
To: TomGuy
Windows will see the other partitions and assign drive letters so long as the partitions are formated with either fat16, fat32, or NTFS.
The OP might want to try four partitions. 1)OS 2)swap file 3)programs 4)data
Having the swap file parssed out is especially helpful in NTFS systems when you try to do a physical scan with Scandisk or Norton Disk Doctor.
To: Diddle E. Squat
By now I am sure that your problems are solved. Having fought with Comet Cursor, I no linger use any website that tries to install it. Audio Galaxy may be an OK site, but no more for me or anyone else i know.
With Comet, let it install. Give it bogus information at every turn. (anyone@comet.com, etc.) Reboot and then delete it from Control Panel. Ignore every warning and get rid of it.
Please go out and buy a new 7200 rpm drive and install it into your emachines system. Trust me. Your hard drive will fail. I know more about emachines quality than I care to admit. In anycase, 40 gigs for $100 is the going rate in our area for a new drive. Then copy all important information to the new drive. If you have room, buy a CD burner or get a USB burner.
Comet Cursor is one of the most worthless programs ever to imitate a virus i have ever seen.
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-48 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson