Quote:
Originally Posted by dpastern
To be honest - it's far better to have a solid backup regime, and if the operating system goes awry, you can blow it all way, reinstall and bring back your data.
You could also consider using a far more robust operating system.
Dave
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Hi David and Bobson and WYO again,
thanks for those replies. I agree with you, and in fact have one of these external hard drive backups things (called a Buffalo) and it does look after backups automatically as you suggest. But it suddenly occured to me the other day, after I'd experienced some difficulty booting my pc, that if it wouldn't boot, then how would I get to the 'buffalo' restore facility which is on the pc?
So, unless there's a simple answer to that question, I figured I need some way of booting the pc from another source, - like the cd drive.
So that's why I was pursuing that line of attack. I have paid for and downloaded (only $50) the thing that WYO suggested, although I stil haven't sorted out what I do with the downloaded file. There are some instructions to follow which I'm working through slowly.
It doesn't help that you don't get a copy of the Windows cd with most systems these days. So if your pc goes down, you're right up the creek without a paddle so to speak.
I've often wondered about using a different OS, but to be honest, for those of us that just want to turn it on and 'it works', the idea of having to be more hands on and knowledgable with the new OS is more than a bit scary. I'm hopeless enough with Windows, let alone whatever else is out there
Cheers