S
Sean Hays
My Win 98 laptop recently failed and I had the entire
harddrive backed up onto two DVDs by a local technician
with the hardware capability to do so. Now, I am trying
to copy files and folders from the DVDs to a Windows
laptop, and many of them are not transferring.
The cause SEEMS to be due to the length of the file name.
Since I did not due the backup, I do not know what
settings were used (i.e. ISO), but I was told that they
used standard ISO with Joliet enabled to maintain the
original directory/folder/file name length.
I am able to transfer the files to the old Windows 98
laptop (barely) and open them there, but I am not able to
transfer them to the Windows XP laptop.
Is there anyone out there with some ideas?
I can be reached at (e-mail address removed).
By the way... the full error reads:
"Cannot copy <file name>: Cannot read from the source
file or disk"
I also get:
"Cannot copy <file name>: Data error (cyclic redundancy
check)."
This is probably related to the conversion from FAT32 to
NTFS.
Thanks!!!!
(e-mail address removed)
harddrive backed up onto two DVDs by a local technician
with the hardware capability to do so. Now, I am trying
to copy files and folders from the DVDs to a Windows
laptop, and many of them are not transferring.
The cause SEEMS to be due to the length of the file name.
Since I did not due the backup, I do not know what
settings were used (i.e. ISO), but I was told that they
used standard ISO with Joliet enabled to maintain the
original directory/folder/file name length.
I am able to transfer the files to the old Windows 98
laptop (barely) and open them there, but I am not able to
transfer them to the Windows XP laptop.
Is there anyone out there with some ideas?
I can be reached at (e-mail address removed).
By the way... the full error reads:
"Cannot copy <file name>: Cannot read from the source
file or disk"
I also get:
"Cannot copy <file name>: Data error (cyclic redundancy
check)."
This is probably related to the conversion from FAT32 to
NTFS.
Thanks!!!!
(e-mail address removed)