drive content disappeared

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Guest

Hi,

When I´m trying to access the content of my D drive, I receive the following
error message:

The disk in drive D is not formatted. Do you want to format it now?

It looks as if the drive is "empy" or not accessible, but I realized that it
is not, because sometimes after having run Registry Mechanic I still can
access the content of the D drive.
 
David said:
Sounds like you need to reinstall your os

Please quote some of the original post when you reply. Here is the OP:

"When I´m trying to access the content of my D drive, I receive the
following error message:

"The disk in drive D is not formatted. Do you want to format it now?

"It looks as if the drive is "empy" or not accessible, but I realized
that it is not, because sometimes after having run Registry Mechanic I
still can access the content of the D drive."

While it is possible that the OP will need to reinstall Windows, he has
not provided enough information for you to come to that conclusion. To
the OP - here are some questions and suggestions:

1. What is D:? A hard drive? Is it old and what sort of data does it
contain? Have you run a hard drive diagnostic utility on it?

2. What changed between the time things worked and the time they didn't?

3. Describe your computer - specs, age, brand.

4. And finally, go here to see what kind of information you should
include in your next post in order to get good, focused troubleshooting
help: http://www.dts-l.org/goodpost.htm

Malke
 
malke
i dont want to be a nerd or something but i know one thing for sure the post
that helps is a good one. it doesnt actually matter if you include anything
from the previous post or not. as for the fact about if it is a hard drive or
not its quite clear from bobb's post that it is.

a suggestion before you post anything else "READ CAREFULLY"

yogi
 
yogi said:
malke
i dont want to be a nerd or something but i know one thing for sure
the post that helps is a good one. it doesnt actually matter if you
include anything from the previous post or not. as for the fact about
if it is a hard drive or not its quite clear from bobb's post that it
is.

Actually, posting and properly quoting does make a difference. These
groups are archived and searchable and keeping the thread intact is
important not only for the immediate use of the parties involved but
for future reference.

You are using the web interface which is not a good way to access
Usenet. People who work with newsgroups regularly use a newsreader and
when replying to a post, real newsreaders strip out everything after
the signature delimiter. I'd suggest you learn something about Usenet.
Here are some links to help you with that:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usenet
http://groups.google.com/support/bin/static.py?page=basics.html - Basics
of Usenet

http://michaelstevenstech.com/outlookexpressnewreader.htm
http://rickrogers.org/setupoe.htm

http://www.dts-l.org/goodpost.htm

http://aumha.org/nntp.htm - list of MS newsgroups
microsoft.public.test.here - MS group to test if your newsreader is
working properly
http://www.mailmsg.com/SPAM_munging.htm - how to munge email address
http://www.blakjak.demon.co.uk/mul_crss.htm - multiposting vs.
crossposting

Malke
 
malke,
thanks for the links malke but i'm happy using the web interface. i have
been using it for quite sometime now. no one who uses usenet has said there
was a problem interpreting what i posted. neither do i. i guess you are the
only one who has that problem

thanks anyways
yogi
 
Before you guys start shooting at each other, here more details.

D is indeed a hard drive (what else anyway ???)

I´m using a 3.4 megs 64k Athlon, age 1year, 6months, 3 days and 5 hours a
couple of minutes (hope that is precise enough. I could ylso have added the
age of my grandma, so please tell me if you need that too ...)

No change in soft or hard ware.

hope this helps
 
yogi said:
malke
i dont want to be a nerd or something but i know one thing for sure
the post that helps is a good one. it doesnt actually matter if you
include anything from the previous post or not. as for the fact about
if it is a hard drive or not its quite clear from bobb's post that it
is.


*Many* newsgroup participants (me, for example) don't keep already-read
messages. To us, a message that doesn't contain a quote of enough of the
previous method to put your reply into perspective is unintelligible.

It's not just a matter of communicating with the original poster. He may
understand a message without a quote, but the rest of us won't. And if A
asks a question, to which B replies without quoting , it's very difficult
for C to provide a correction, addition, or anything else he may want to
say.

Nobody can make you quote if you don't want to, but if you don't, be
prepared to have a sizeable percentage of your messages ignored simply
because hardly anyone can understand them.
 
yogi said:
malke
i dont want to be a nerd or something but i know one thing for sure the post
that helps is a good one. it doesnt actually matter if you include anything
from the previous post or not. as for the fact about if it is a hard drive or
not its quite clear from bobb's post that it is.

a suggestion before you post anything else "READ CAREFULLY"

yogi

It's best to include at least some information from the original post in
one's reply. That's standard in usenet. It keeps the context and for
those that use a newsreader, they may not have the old post for reference.

Though you may use the web interface, that's a poor way to access usenet
groups. A newsreader has many advantages.

It was not clear from the OPs post if it was a hard drive or CD. Malke
was right on with her post. I notice he did clarify it in a later
response which should have been in the original.

Why are you jumping on Malke's posts? You have done this several times?
Why not just focus on replying to the OP?
 
Bobbb said:
Hi,

When I´m trying to access the content of my D drive, I receive the following
error message:

The disk in drive D is not formatted. Do you want to format it now?

It looks as if the drive is "empy" or not accessible, but I realized that it
is not, because sometimes after having run Registry Mechanic I still can
access the content of the D drive.

Now that we know it's a hard drive, download a drive diagnostic utility
from the hard drive manufacturer's web site. That will create a
bootable floppy or CD. Run the diagnostics from there.
 
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