Tom <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>So I've been having trouble with this laptop of mine for a week now. I opened it up to fix the touch pad. Carefully replaced everything and started it up and it give me the "we apologize for the inconvience....restart in safe mode...last known setting...windows normally" I've tried all of these with no luck. When starting windows normally or last known setting it goes to the windows logo screen...waits there a while and then the screen flickers and then goes black the hard disk LED which is lit through this, turns off but I hear something coming from that general area as if the laptop is still on. When I try loading in safe mode, a bunch of drivers scroll down the screen and then the same thing...flickers and screen goes black. Nothing brings any picture back. I tried reinstalling xp home ed with the 6 boot disks (SP1) but on the third disk it gives me error msg 4099...setupreg.hiv could not be found. So I tried an MS-DOS boot up and it of course gives me the a:\> prompt. When I
type
>C:, it say invalid drive specification. I'm at a loss here, I was really hoping not to give it to a professional rip-off who charges $XX/hr as I'm a poor man. Is there a way to fix my computer's state? I NEED to get these files that are trapped in my computer for a research project that I'm working on. If I run Fdisk will this help, or will it erase the important files on my hard drive. Help is desperately needed...Thank you for your time.
>
It sounds like your laptop's hard drive is using the NTFS file system,
and that is why you cannot access the drive using a regular DOS boot
disk.
If you use FDISK to make any changes to the hard drive you will wipe
out the existing contents of the drive completely and it will cost you
thousands of dollars to recover the files.
There is a way to recover files, especially a relatively small
quantity of files, from an NTFS hard drive but it does require some
familiarity with DOS commands and with the general concept of files
and directories/folders. However if there is more than 50 mb or so of
files that must be recovered then this procedure will probably be too
cumbersome to be practicable.
Post a response back here if you would like detailed instructions for
recovering these files.
And that will still leave the problem of getting your laptop back into
operation. I suspect that you may have inadvertently dislodged or
damaged something during your touchpad repairs and the computer may
therefore require the "hands on" attention of a qualified hardware
technician.
Good luck
Ron Martell Duncan B.C. Canada
--
Microsoft MVP
On-Line Help Computer Service
http://onlinehelp.bc.ca
"The reason computer chips are so small is computers don't eat much."