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  • 1979 - 1995 (Fox, SN95.0, & 2.3L) -General/Talk-

COMPUTERS SUCK!

  • Thread starter Thread starter stprorolla49
  • Start date Start date May 18, 2006

stprorolla49

Active Member
Oct 9, 2004
1,455
15
39
Fairfield, CT/North Jersey
May 18, 2006
#1
  • May 18, 2006
  • #1
So my computer decides to crash last night....my computer that has all my portfolio work, all my music, all my pictures, and all the videos i've either made, or downloaded. Not only that, but now my router on my brothers computer decided to die, and i needa send it back to linksys and have them replace it. Therefore, theres only one computer in the house with the internet, probably for over a week, and this computer just so happens to be my brothers computer, and the only reason i can go on it now, is cause he's in school. I LIVE on my computer, and i dont know what im gonna do without it......DAMMIT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

sorry guys, but this is one of the worst thing ever!
 

urban96

bubb rubb says:"woo woooooo"
Founding Member
Sep 24, 2002
3,464
1
69
Syracuse, NY
May 18, 2006
#2
  • May 18, 2006
  • #2
what happen to it? virus? dosent power up at all?

if it was a virus and you dont want to lose all your saved info you can buy another hard drive and then use your current one as a backup then install a fresh copy of windows on your new HD.

if it dosent power on at all it could just be a bad power supply, simple fix

if its some other type of hardware issue you could test your current HD into a different computer and copy all your info that way
 

The Green GT

No 13 year olds are safe around me.
10 Year Member
Jan 8, 2006
1,269
19
99
Louisiana
May 18, 2006
#3
  • May 18, 2006
  • #3
urban96 said:
if its some other type of hardware issue you could test your current HD into a different computer and copy all your info that way
Click to expand...
I tried that one time and screwed up both computers lol

stprorolla49 said:
this is one of the worst thing ever!
Click to expand...

Atleast your car didnt crash.
 

fiveoho

15 Year Member
Apr 28, 2005
1,958
16
69
TN
May 18, 2006
#4
  • May 18, 2006
  • #4
when you say 'crash' , explain what happened and what it does now. anything at all?
 

stprorolla49

Active Member
Oct 9, 2004
1,455
15
39
Fairfield, CT/North Jersey
May 18, 2006
#5
  • May 18, 2006
  • #5
unmountable_boot_volume on the blue screen with white writing at startup...i believe i just needa get the xp pro disc back from my g-pa, i have a solution on what to do...

and i just bought a new router for the time being until i get the one from linksys, which im gonna return...
 

urban96

bubb rubb says:"woo woooooo"
Founding Member
Sep 24, 2002
3,464
1
69
Syracuse, NY
May 18, 2006
#6
  • May 18, 2006
  • #6
if you have really important info on there you dont wanna lose you could try putting that HD in another computer and coping your files to the other one then format the HD and start fresh
 

illwood

Member
Apr 3, 2004
636
1
19
Worcester, MA
May 18, 2006
#7
  • May 18, 2006
  • #7
2 words

DVD BURNER

Backup all the usefull stuff every so often.
 

urban96

bubb rubb says:"woo woooooo"
Founding Member
Sep 24, 2002
3,464
1
69
Syracuse, NY
May 18, 2006
#8
  • May 18, 2006
  • #8
illwood said:
2 words

DVD BURNER

Backup all the usefull stuff every so often.
Click to expand...
even tho their only like $45 for a 16X i still havnt bought one
 
Z

zZsKyZz

Member
Dec 1, 2005
503
0
17
May 18, 2006
#9
  • May 18, 2006
  • #9
I never view it as the computer being stupid.. It's only as smart as its user.

Did you backup your files? Constant crashing due to what? Virus? Do you have AV software? Was it up to date? Wrong drivers? Have you ever defraged the HD? Scandisk? Was your OS updated?

There's tons of questions... I wouldn't just blame the computer.
 

GRGT1994

New Member
Sep 22, 2004
1,034
0
0
May 18, 2006
#10
  • May 18, 2006
  • #10
stprorolla49 said:
unmountable_boot_volume on the blue screen with white writing at startup..
Click to expand...
That means you need to run Window install and do a repair. First, enter your bios setup (watch closely upon initial bootup and you will see the command - sometimes it's tab). In bios, make sure your boot sequence first looks to your CD-ROM, then to the hard drive. Now save and exit. Then insert the Windows install CD and power up.

It takes forever for the Windows install to load. But when it does it will ask you if you want to repair or install a new copy of Windows. Start by trying to repair it. IF that does not work, then buy a new hard drive and install windows on that, with the old drive installed as a slave. Once you get windows reinstalled, then you should be able to access the old drive and pull off old data.

I just went through all this too. After you are up and running, establish a backup schedule (once a month, once a quarter, etc.) and keep it up. You might even consider using the old drive as your backup C:. For example, after you get your new install done and stabile with all your settings and passwords re-established, then do a drive copy to the old drive. Then unplug the old drive and shelve it somewhere for the next time this happens.

Good luck.
 

Car Nut

Founding Member
Jul 6, 2000
1,176
1
37
Snellville, Georgia (Atlanta area)
May 18, 2006
#11
  • May 18, 2006
  • #11
Any computer store should carry a USB hard drive case that will fit desktop size hard drives. Just put your bad hard drive in the case and connect the case to a good computer using USB. Very simple. Your hard drive should be accessible. Copy your data to the good computer.

Then.......do the Windows fix mentioned above. If it were me and that didn't work, I'd format the drive and slap on a new copy of windows or use your Restore CDs that came with the computer.

Backups? Get a USB hard drive that is bigger than your current drive. Get some backup software that doesn't compress or encrypt your data. I suggest Cobian Backup which can be found doing an Internet search. It's free and has worked perfectly for me at home and at work on dozens of computers for over 4 years. I prefer to see "real" files in the backup location, rather than something encrypted that may be difficult to unencrypt in an emergency.

I do this stuff weekly at work and frankly, technology today has made disaster recovery so much easier and efficient. It's cheap, too.

Good luck.
 

Blackened302

Active Member
Jul 21, 2005
1,439
0
36
South TX
May 19, 2006
#12
  • May 19, 2006
  • #12
GRGT1994 said:
That means you need to run Window install and do a repair. First, enter your bios setup (watch closely upon initial bootup and you will see the command - sometimes it's tab). In bios, make sure your boot sequence first looks to your CD-ROM, then to the hard drive. Now save and exit. Then insert the Windows install CD and power up.

It takes forever for the Windows install to load. But when it does it will ask you if you want to repair or install a new copy of Windows. Start by trying to repair it. IF that does not work, then buy a new hard drive and install windows on that, with the old drive installed as a slave. Once you get windows reinstalled, then you should be able to access the old drive and pull off old data.

I just went through all this too. After you are up and running, establish a backup schedule (once a month, once a quarter, etc.) and keep it up. You might even consider using the old drive as your backup C:. For example, after you get your new install done and stabile with all your settings and passwords re-established, then do a drive copy to the old drive. Then unplug the old drive and shelve it somewhere for the next time this happens.

Good luck.
Click to expand...
+1
 

stprorolla49

Active Member
Oct 9, 2004
1,455
15
39
Fairfield, CT/North Jersey
May 19, 2006
#13
  • May 19, 2006
  • #13
thanks for all the support guys...i got teh boot disk back fom my grandfather, and fixed that problem, as well as my broken router...im all good now, and abck on :SNSign:
 
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