carl said:
we have a notice that keeps popping up on our computer. it states that our
disk drive d is full.
when we check on disk drive d it says that it has 60 MB available of 9 GB.
How do we get rid of this notice and should the drive be this large?
also while checking this out we opened system properties and under the
system protection index in the section of Automatic restore points it says
there are 3 available disks, one is recovery (D

, Local Disk (C

(System)
and (C

(Missing) this drive has a check next to it. Should this drive
be
listed there with a check by it?
I'm thinking that something is storing stuff on this drive, perhaps backup
software.
On my Compaq, my recovery partition is about 5 or 6 GB and I have about 900
MB free.
A year ago I had very good luck getting online help with a WXP eMachine. I
used the online chat service through a dialup connection and allowed the
technician to take control of my machine. I believe you can use this
service even though your warrantee has expired, but I'm not sure. If you
try this, be prepared. Create a Notepad file with info like when you bought
the computer, when the problem started, and the size and free remaining
space of the drive. That makes it easy to copy info from Notepad and paste
it into the chat so you don't feel pressed to supply correct info faster
than you can type.
I had intended to ask you to post a complete directory of your recovery
partition, but on my machine, that is kind of a large amount of stuff to
post. Perhaps just post what is in the root of drive d:. Do this by
opening a command window and typing
dir /a d:
and hit enter. This should list 10 to 20 things. You should be able to
copy that info and paste it into a response in this newsgroup. Maybe
someone with an eMachine will spot the stuff that doesn't belong in the
recovery partition. To copy the stuff from the command window, right click
in the window, choose 'select all', and hit enter. The clipboard will now
contain the stuff, and you can paste it into Notepad or whatever application
you use to post to this newsgroup.
-Paul Randall