LAS wrote:
> Last night I was booting up in safe mode repeatedly. Then I was suddenly no
> longer able to logon on. It wouldn't accept any username password
> combination. (I could have messed things up by shutting down with the
> button at a wrong time.) The default username that's displayed in the
> dialogue box must have changed because it has no domain, whereas the
> password I was using successfully requires a domain.
>
> I have tried these things:
>
> "administrator"
> <the password for admin that I've had taped to my laptop for years -
> haven't tried it for years, but haven't changed it either>
>
> <domain I use for normal logons>\<Name I use for normal logons>
> <passowrd I use for normal logons>
>
> <original username>
> <my guess at my original standard password>
>
> Is there anything I can do to get back the ability to log on in safe mode?
>
> TIA
> LAS
>
Make a backup of the disk first. I back up my laptop, using a Linux LiveCD,
an external USB2 hard drive enclosure, and the "dd" command. By booting Linux,
it doesn't matter how broken the hard drive is on the laptop, I can copy it.
It also gives me "bare metal recovery", in the sense that the laptop drive
can be completely erased, and I can put the image I made back, with one
dd command.
Once you've done your backup, for safety, then, well, have fun...
http://www.petri.co.il/forgot_admini...r_password.htm
With the backup in hand, and the external disk disconnected, it doesn't
matter how wrong your experiments go, you can always get back to where
you were. Cost is $100 for the external drive, and the download time
for your Linux LiveCD (Ubuntu for example). I have a stack of Linux
CDs now, and continue to test new OSes, when I find them (currently
working on Solaris, but that one isn't looking good).
Paul