Boot Disk - NTFS
Date: Sun, 8 Jun 2003 16:56:59 -0700
I recently had the misfortune to have to resort to boot
disks to try to recover from a system failure under
Windows XP SP1. To my dismay when booted up using MS-DOS
startup disk I could not access any drive other than the
floppy (A:) drive. Is there a better way to bootup in
such a situations that will allow me to see all my disk
partitions so that I can get to recovery files, apps etc.
Any advice would be appreciated.
Peter
Relevant Pages
- Re: FAT32 or NTFS?
... >>10% wastage on 10 volumes is one whole hard disk wasted. ... >uncertainty about free space. ... Corrupt data can be better than none, ... "you can only recover part of the database". ... (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general) - RE: Dead hard drive
... Maybe you could recover ... That's a single FAT 32 active partition w/ XP Pro on it and it can access ... Here is a quick way to find if anything is left on your disk: ... to format the disk. ... (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general) - Re: Systems Registry data problem
... using a backup disk that I made a few weeks ago. ... There is still a problem with the Registry because I cannot run Registry ... Choose the most recent restore point and SR should restore the user ... How to Recover from a Corrupted Registry ... (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general) - Re: Systems Registry data problem
... I tried to use the memtest program but had great difficulty in copying to disk using Nero, and when it ran, it only seemed to carry out one sweep of the RAM and then seemed to go to sleep. ... There is still a problem with the Registry because I cannot run Registry Mechanic, which I have used in the past, or Regcure. ... Both of these programs stall part way through, the screen goes black and does not recover or give an error message. ... Choose the most recent restore point and SR should restore the user ... (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general) - Re: Dog bit audio CD. Any Hope of recovery?
... When I look at the disk there is one small ... dent, the size of a pin head. ... Linux) will make extreme efforts to recover the data. ... If there's enough of a dent in the bottom of the disc to cause ... (rec.audio.tech) |
|