G
Guest
Hi, I am using Windows XP Pro, and am in desperate need of help! My copy of
windows became terminally corrupted, and I was forced to format my C drive
and do a complete reinstall. However, I had security permissions set on some
of my folders on the D drive, that contain just about all of my personal
documents. After re-installing I found that I no longer have access to these
folders, as I am essentially a new user!
I restarted the computer in safe mode, but at this point chkdsk said it had
to r-indx all the files on my D drive. I eventually logged in as an
administrator, and was able to take ownership of the folders in question,
then reset the permissions. I can now access every folder, but each
individual file, whether a picture or mp3 or word document gives the message
access denied when I try to run them. I should point out that none of the
files are or were encrypted. Can anyone help? I'm starting to think that I've
lost everything on my computer that is important to me, and not all of it is
backed up Any information at all will be gratefully received, thanks,
Sam
windows became terminally corrupted, and I was forced to format my C drive
and do a complete reinstall. However, I had security permissions set on some
of my folders on the D drive, that contain just about all of my personal
documents. After re-installing I found that I no longer have access to these
folders, as I am essentially a new user!
I restarted the computer in safe mode, but at this point chkdsk said it had
to r-indx all the files on my D drive. I eventually logged in as an
administrator, and was able to take ownership of the folders in question,
then reset the permissions. I can now access every folder, but each
individual file, whether a picture or mp3 or word document gives the message
access denied when I try to run them. I should point out that none of the
files are or were encrypted. Can anyone help? I'm starting to think that I've
lost everything on my computer that is important to me, and not all of it is
backed up Any information at all will be gratefully received, thanks,
Sam