I do I get my E:\ drive retsore?

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Guest

I had an e drive, and I was using a flash disk, and it knocked out my e
drive. I do I restore it back. There are programs on thye e drive that will
not work in my window desk top because they do no trecognized the e drive
that I lost. Please help!
 
Tony said:
I had an e drive, and I was using a flash disk, and it knocked out my e
drive. I do I restore it back. There are programs on thye e drive that
will
not work in my window desk top because they do no trecognized the e drive
that I lost. Please help!

You probably would do better asking this question in one of the Windows
newsgroups that may be appropriate to your problem. This newsgroup is
dedicated to the Microsoft Access database product. The Microsoft website is
not all that clear and may have misdirected you.
--
Arvin Meyer, MCP, MVP
Free MS-Access downloads:
http://www.datastrat.com
http://www.mvps.org/access
http://www.accessmvp.com
 
I had an e drive, and I was using a flash disk, and it knocked out my e
drive. I do I restore it back. There are programs on thye e drive that will
not work in my window desk top because they do no trecognized the e drive
that I lost. Please help!

You're asking in the wrong place. This newsgroup is for Microsoft
Access, a database application.

Please scroll down the list of subjects and find one for your version
of Windows.

Your E: drive is probably now named F:, for what it's worth - your
data should be intact.

John W. Vinson[MVP]
 
Try the following:

1. Dismount your flash disk from your computer properly.

2. Right-click on "My Computer" icon and select Manage. You can access this
also by Windows / Settings / Control Panel / Administrative Tools / Computer
Management.

3. On the left pane, you should see "Storage" and underneath "Disk
Management".

4. Right-click on the partition that needs to be remounted and select
"Change Drive Letter and Paths ... and select E: for this drive.

5. Close "Computer Management" and the drive E; should be back in business.

This is a Windows question, though. If the above doesn't help, please
re-post to one of the Windows newsgroup.
 
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