Posted August 28, 200717 yr How hard is it do either? Does a repair fix al errors? Does it wipe out all your files? Does a reinstall wipe out all your files? I was going to use these guides; http://www.windowsxphome.windowsreinstall....dexfullpage.htm http://www.windowsxphome.windowsreinstall....dexfullpage.htm
August 28, 200717 yr If I was fixing someone else computer, I would just do a repair and get done with it quickly. If it was my own computer, then if possible, like if I had backups of everything, then I would prefer todo a complete reinstall and clean everything.
August 28, 200717 yr Do you not need a backup then for a repair? No, repair just overwrites all Windows files with files on the CD.
August 29, 200717 yr Author Excellent, because my prob;e, is that I cna't backup as my stupid drive (or windows) won't detect anything.
August 29, 200717 yr Excellent, because my prob;e, is that I cna't backup as my stupid drive (or windows) won't detect anything. You should have made a backup before, because you never know when something unexpected occurs. You could remove the disk, and insert into another computer as secondary hard disk, and copy over files. Its always a good idea, to have backup of important data. If its very small, could be put on a USB memory. If more, could be burnt to one or several CD-RW or DVD-RW discs, and if really much, you could purchase an additional harddisk, many like external USB harddisks for backups.
August 31, 200717 yr By the way, you will have data lost soon or later. That happend to everybody. Just backup your personal datas and not your entire hdd. Put your datas on a DVD and you will be able to get them back when you'll have an issue. :hello:
August 31, 200717 yr Epsilon EOD, I see you didn’t read his other posts but he can’t use his DVD-RW at this moment, this is why he’s looking to reinstall his computer again or to use the repair function. Ultimate Predator, I would make a backup any way. Is there a way you could connect your computer to another or borrow a second hard disk? In addition, if you reinstall I would make 2 partitions on that drive so you can keep your personal data on an other partition while you format the "windows drive" and reinstall your OS without thinking and worrying about data-loss. You could also look at Acronis True Image; it makes an Image on another "unseen" partition and can restore your "windows drive" in just a few minutes. I bought Acronis True Image by the way, and I’m very pleased with it.
September 1, 200717 yr Author Hmm. So you wouldn't recommend reinstalling? I don't wan to go into details, but if it f***s up, the users are gonna be very p***ed off as they use it for business, and at the moment this problem doesn't really effect them.
September 1, 200717 yr Administrator Since no one has yet found out, is there a reason behind your question? Why do you want to do a repair/reinstall?
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