<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> I have Win2K Pro installed in the C:\ & WinXP Pro installed in the D:\
> of my m/c. Usually I use WinXP Pro, hence I have set it as the primary
> OS.
>
> After working on my m/c for around 6-7 hours today evening, I swtiched
> it off & went for my dinner. When I came back & restarted WinXP, I got
> the *hal.dll file missing or corrupt* error!
>
> I restarted my m/c, logged into Win2K Pro & opened *My Computer* but
> when I tried to open D:\, Win2K tells me that the disk is not
> formatted & that it needs formatting!
>
> What do I do now?
>
> I JUST CANNOT AFFORD TO FORMAT D:\ AT ANY COST! MY LIFE DEPENDS ON IT!
>
> Someone please suggest me a way to get out of this massacre.
>
> I had shut down WinXP Pro properly (closed all open windows, clicked
> the *Start* button, then selected *Shut down* & finally clicked the
> *OK* button) just before going for my dinner. I neither installed any
> new hardware or software nor did I do any mischief that might prevent
> WinXP from booting normally when I restart WinXP the next time; then
> why does Windows do this on its own? What sin have I committed for
> WinXP to behave in this manner? This is so frustrating. Why doesn't
> Microsoft ensure that Windows doesn't crash by itself (unless & until
> someone deletes some files/folders that Windows uses to boot or any
> other mischievious activities)?>
Whenever I read things like "I cannot afford to lose this data" or
"My life depends on it" I wonder why people don't back up their
data regularly while they can. An external hard disk in a USB case
costs less than $100 - it's about the cheapest life saver I can think of.
You must install your disk as a slave disk in somebody else's PC,
then run some data recovery tool. You must not use your disk for
anything in the meantime - the more you use it, the smaller your
chances of success. If you are not an expert in such things and if
your life really depends on retrieving your data then you must give
the disk to a data recovery service. The risk of you losing whatever
is still there is too great.
http://www.restorer2000.com/r2k.htm
http://www.hddrecovery.com.au
http://bootmaster.filerecovery.biz
http://www.runtime.org/ (GetDataBack - has a trial version)
http://www.softwarepatch.com/softwar...cdownload.html
http://www.snapfiles.com/get/restoration.html
www.acronis.com (RecoveryExpert)