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#1 | |
God Like Status
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For the future: Remove hard drive. Install new hard drive, format and install OS. Install old drive as a slave or external. Copy old files over to new drive. If the old drive has no physical errors - after you are sure nothing is left on it - then reformat it and save in case something happens in the future or use as a slave/USB for daily backups. Ron |
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#2 | |
It's gon RAIN
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And get one of THESE. |
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#3 | |
Crotchety Geezer
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Another option is to have a linux live cd around that you can boot to and use as a rescue disk. Boot to cd, copy important HD files to usb, verify them, and only then do the fdisk/format. What I also do is to clone the hard drive after all of the software and updates are installed on a clean installation. That way you can quickly get the computer up and running with very little work. I clone to an HD in an external enclosure, so a simple swap will get the computer running again. File backups are something else, I backup modified files daily and take a backup home weekly. Old school, I run xcopy as a scheduled task or manually for the external. I also have a portable at home that has the same software installed so if my desktop burned I would be able to work.
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How can you have any pudding if you don't eat your meat? |
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#4 | |
Order Restored
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#5 |
Corona Cigars
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Well I got most of everything set up and it's running better than it was before. Thanks for the advice, but it was not needed, I was just ranting and annoyed by the fact that I couldn't fix it in time. I know a great deal about computers so I got this =).
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