Posts Tagged ‘Windows Xp’

Windows XP Upgradation, Reinstallation Or Repairing Results in Data Loss

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

When a user upgrades, reinstalls or repairs Windows XP operating system, data loss might occur. This data loss generally occurs due to overwriting of files (as in My Documents, Desktop, Local Settings etc. folders), file system issues and more.

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Installing a Network Printer on Windows XP Vista 2003-2008

Saturday, July 11th, 2009

There are many simple steps to installing a network printer. I will outline the straightforward method first, then give some information about abnormal situations.

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The First File Recovery Website

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Amanda Wood is a contributor at Free-backup.info — the home of the popular tool for personal online backup — Back2zip. This article can be found at http://free-backup.info/the-first-file-recovery-website.html

Definition of File Recovery

To define the term file recovery, you’ll first need to know what a file is. A file is a collection of data or information that has a name, called the filename. Nearly all information stored in a computer must be in a file. Different types of files are data files, text files, program files, directory files, and so on. These different types of files all store different types of information. Data files store data, text files store text, program files store programs, and directory files store directories, and so on.

The File Recovery Website

File-Recovery Net is a website based on services to help consumers recover their lost data. Their company was founded in December of 2002. They offer services and programs to help assist in recovering data, whether it has been accidentally deleted or erased, or if the data is missing due to a virus or malfunctioning software over an Internet connection. File-Recovery Net prides themselves in being the first online file recovery service available anywhere.

Other available data recovery utilities require that the user purchase a license outright before they can use it. All these utilities work the same way, differing only in the user interface. Therefore File-Recovery Net’s company services are less expensive by far, then having to purchase a license for an application they’ll probably only use once.

Their programs can recover deleted files and folders on a user’s local drive, and even files from deleted or damaged partitions and drives not accessible by the operating system. Their services and programs operate in all Microsoft Windows environments from Windows 98 to Windows XP. With their intuitive Microsoft Explorer style interface, complete folder and file information is displayed for all drives, thus allowing drag and drop operation to help in the aid of file recovery.

How File Recovery Works

When emptying the Windows Recycle Bin, file recovery utilities take advantage of the fact that the actions are reversible. When files are deleted, they aren’t really deleted. The operating system changes the attribute of the space used by the file. The space of the file is considered in an “occupied” status until deleted. Once it is deleted the status changes from “occupied” to “available.” The file’s information is then hidden until it can be unlocked by a recovery utility.

File-Recovery’s programs include support for IDE, ATA, SCSI hard drives and floppy disks, FAT12, FAT16, FAT32, NTFS, NTFS5 file systems, long file names and local language file names, including non-English. They also specialize in the recovery of compressed and fragmented files on NTFS, detection and recovery from deleted or damaged file partitions, exact file name or partial file name search, disk image restoring. Disk image restoring restores a backup file that represents an entire hard drive.

With the continual advances in operating systems, their web service utility will always be current with updates installed automatically. They also have a trial version of their program, Active@File Recovery, for free that you can obtain from their website.

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Home Data Backup in Windows XP

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

Andrew Whitehead is a contributor at Free-backup.info — the home of the best online backup software — Back2zip. This article can be found at http://free-backup.info/home-data-backup-in-windows-xp.html

Possible Problems with Windows XP Data Backup Facility

The data backup facility in Windows XP is developed by Veritas, and works reasonably well on a small scale. It is very basic and has next to nothing in terms of whistles and bells, which is the root of its potential drawbacks. It has no media spanning; the ability to copy the data backup file to more than one disk, or whatever your preferred media is. If you are copying only your data file this is probably not going to be a problem, if you want to copy the whole drive it may be.

A second problem is that XP data backups are not compatible with Windows 98. If this is a problem, because you have some old data backups for instance, there is a way around it – you buy the commercial version from Veritas.

Another problem that some may find is doing a complete backup on a PC with no floppy drive. As a complete backup includes creating a recovery disk, it will return an error if there is no drive to create it on.

Deciding What to Put into Your Data Backup

Deciding what files to put into your data backup will decide whether you can use the XP data backup. If you have the installation disks from all of your applications you can get away with backing up only your data files, almost all of which are stored by default in My Documents making life very simple. You might also want to backup the registry, and you should beware of applications that store their files in dedicated, non-My Documents folders. The ones to watch are anything that works on text or graphics files.

Using Windows XP Data Backup

You will find it by going through Start/Control Panel/Performance and Maintenance, and you will see ‘Backup your data’.

If this is your first time, a wizard will appear, giving you two options. The simplest to decide is wether you want to ‘Always Start in Wizard Mode’. The easy answer is yes, but if you feel confident uncheck it. The other option is ‘Advanced Mode’ that not surprisingly offers more options.

Following the Wizard by clicking next gives two options, backup or restore. Since we are doing a data backup the choice is obvious. You now get four options of what to back up, select ‘My Documents’ unless you have reason not to, and click next. The next screen asks where you want the backup to go; the default is the desktop. Go with this. If you select ‘Finish’ now you will get a default backup.

You will see an Advanced button here, clicking this allows you to choose which folders to copy, whether it is a normal, copy, differential, incremental, or daily backup with explanations of the differences, and the options for verifying – always select this! – and volume shadow copy that allows files in use to be copied. Next you get the option to append or replace existing files, and finally run now or later.

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Speeding Up Your Computer – Windows XP

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

Have you found that over time your computer has become slower and slower? There are several reasons why this occurs, and in this article I will address one of those reasons. I will address this particular issue because it is simple to resolve, and the performance gain can be significant.

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