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Solve : Hard Drive replacing each other? |
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Answer» Today, I reinstalled windows xp, because apparently, our computer got a few viruses that we were unable to get rid of. I copied everything important onto D Drive How did you copy files? How did you 'nuke' C:? Quote from: leomon235 on November 22, 2007, 08:50:29 PM P.S: Before you ask, I nuked the CORRECT drive while reinstalling windows. I triple checked that I was deleting C-Drive, and not D-Drive, so don't tell me that I deleted the wrong hard drive.You might say that but to me it still sounds like you deleted the wrong drive... There is no way the entire content of your old C drive could copy to D by it self.1. Hard Drives. How many physical hard drives are on your system? 2. Logical Drives. Are "C:" and "D:" on the same physical drive? 3. Define "copy". How did you copy everything important? What software did you use? The Microsoft "copy" command, drag and drop? 4. Define "nuke". How did you "nuke" the "C:" drive? What software program did you use? 5. Windows XP Installation. What did you use to re-install Windows XP? a. Microsoft Windows XP Setup CD (Retail CD) b. OEM Windows XP Setup CD c. OEM Recovery CD (aka Restore CD) d. OEM Recovery Partition (aka Restore Partition) 6. It sounds like you did a "clean" install of Windows XP from either Microsoft Windows XP Setup CD or OEM Windows XP Setup CD. If that's the case you need to re-install all of your applications to ensure the new operating system recognizes them (adds application installation data into the Windows registry). Generally you would install the applications from their source CDs or download files. If you have access to the source files (and any product key numbers you might need; e.g. Microsoft Office), then you won't need the programs on the D: drive. |
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