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#1
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Don't have a floppy drive to use with ASR
I'm trying to back up my ThinkPad T30 before installing XP Service Pack 3, as
the installation instructions suggest. Unfortunately, while I've been able to back up the C: hard drive's files to a USB drive, I can't create a D: recovery partition or an ASR "system settings" disk without a floppy drive. (I also don't have a Windows XP Professional CD--it came pre-loaded on the machine--but I think that creating D: would make the CD unnecessary?) The only mentions I've been able to find about this problem state that, since XP Pro's BIOS doesn't recognize anything but C: or a floppy disk drive (E: I think??) as bootable, one can't use ASR to save the system settings to a CD or USB drive, for example. I can't help but think this is obsolete; after all, there were plenty of laptops and desktops shipped with XP Pro and CD drives rather than floppy disk drives! Can anyone point me to a solution to this problem? BIG bonus good karma points for procedures or products that are free/cheap and really simple to do/use. I've been unemployed for a while & this ThinkPad came to me by good fortune, so upgrading to modern hardware or software really isn't an option. I want to use it with as little chance of malware/microorganisms as possible, but I don't have the OS background knowledge to understand anything technical (yet). Many thanks! |
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#2
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Don't have a floppy drive to use with ASR
Don't use Microsoft Backup to backup your system...what you want is
proper disk imaging software. Which you'll want to use on a regular basis. So you'll never worry about losing your system. --- Leonard Grey Errare humanum est All I Wanted Was a Pony.... wrote: I'm trying to back up my ThinkPad T30 before installing XP Service Pack 3, as the installation instructions suggest. Unfortunately, while I've been able to back up the C: hard drive's files to a USB drive, I can't create a D: recovery partition or an ASR "system settings" disk without a floppy drive. (I also don't have a Windows XP Professional CD--it came pre-loaded on the machine--but I think that creating D: would make the CD unnecessary?) The only mentions I've been able to find about this problem state that, since XP Pro's BIOS doesn't recognize anything but C: or a floppy disk drive (E: I think??) as bootable, one can't use ASR to save the system settings to a CD or USB drive, for example. I can't help but think this is obsolete; after all, there were plenty of laptops and desktops shipped with XP Pro and CD drives rather than floppy disk drives! Can anyone point me to a solution to this problem? BIG bonus good karma points for procedures or products that are free/cheap and really simple to do/use. I've been unemployed for a while & this ThinkPad came to me by good fortune, so upgrading to modern hardware or software really isn't an option. I want to use it with as little chance of malware/microorganisms as possible, but I don't have the OS background knowledge to understand anything technical (yet). Many thanks! |
#3
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Don't have a floppy drive to use with ASR
Don't use Microsoft Backup to backup your system...what you want is
proper disk imaging software. Which you'll want to use on a regular basis. So you'll never worry about losing your system. --- Leonard Grey Errare humanum est All I Wanted Was a Pony.... wrote: I'm trying to back up my ThinkPad T30 before installing XP Service Pack 3, as the installation instructions suggest. Unfortunately, while I've been able to back up the C: hard drive's files to a USB drive, I can't create a D: recovery partition or an ASR "system settings" disk without a floppy drive. (I also don't have a Windows XP Professional CD--it came pre-loaded on the machine--but I think that creating D: would make the CD unnecessary?) The only mentions I've been able to find about this problem state that, since XP Pro's BIOS doesn't recognize anything but C: or a floppy disk drive (E: I think??) as bootable, one can't use ASR to save the system settings to a CD or USB drive, for example. I can't help but think this is obsolete; after all, there were plenty of laptops and desktops shipped with XP Pro and CD drives rather than floppy disk drives! Can anyone point me to a solution to this problem? BIG bonus good karma points for procedures or products that are free/cheap and really simple to do/use. I've been unemployed for a while & this ThinkPad came to me by good fortune, so upgrading to modern hardware or software really isn't an option. I want to use it with as little chance of malware/microorganisms as possible, but I don't have the OS background knowledge to understand anything technical (yet). Many thanks! |
#4
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Don't have a floppy drive to use with ASR
"All I Wanted Was a Pony." All I Wanted Was a
wrote in message I'm trying to back up my ThinkPad T30 before installing XP Service Pack 3, as the installation instructions suggest. Unfortunately, while I've been able to back up the C: hard drive's files to a USB drive, I can't create a D: recovery partition or an ASR "system settings" disk without a floppy drive. (I also don't have a Windows XP Professional CD--it came pre-loaded on the machine--but I think that creating D: would make the CD unnecessary?) The only mentions I've been able to find about this problem state that, since XP Pro's BIOS doesn't recognize anything but C: or a floppy disk drive (E: I think??) as bootable, one can't use ASR to save the system settings to a CD or USB drive, for example. I can't help but think this is obsolete; after all, there were plenty of laptops and desktops shipped with XP Pro and CD drives rather than floppy disk drives! Can anyone point me to a solution to this problem? BIG bonus good karma points for procedures or products that are free/cheap and really simple to do/use. I've been unemployed for a while & this ThinkPad came to me by good fortune, so upgrading to modern hardware or software really isn't an option. I want to use it with as little chance of malware/microorganisms as possible, but I don't have the OS background knowledge to understand anything technical (yet). Many thanks! I know you said money was tight, but ... an external floppy drive can be had for around $10 online at quite a few places these days. Walmart here carries them for $9.99. Any possibility there? What is it you wish to back up? If it's only your own data that you've created, you wouldn't need the ASR diskette. But if you want to also back up the operating system, then you DO need the ASR floppy. And AFAIK there isn't any way to fool the system into thinking a CD drive is a floppy drive. So, technically, without the ASR, you could back up all except the OS. Sometimes that's enough for people because your own data is often a lot of things that cannot be recreated, such as photographs, correspondence, designs, etc. etc.. The Operating System can be recreated easily but at the expense of a few hours work reinstalling it and all of your applications and getting everything set back up and customized as you want it. There ARE freebie programs out there that will do full backups for you. The biggest caveat with those is to be certain they use Volume Shadow (Copy) Services, meaning they can back up files that are "in use", which windows will not permit and which is necessary to back up the OS (Operating System). I can't recommend any because I don't use them, but they are available and people have discussed them here before. Do you have antivirus and anti-spyware apps installed? Those will help immensely in protecting yourself. A software firewall can be a huge assistance too. I like ZoneAlarm but there are several more available free such as Avast, AVG, and more. HTH, Twayne` |
#5
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Don't have a floppy drive to use with ASR
"All I Wanted Was a Pony." All I Wanted Was a
wrote in message I'm trying to back up my ThinkPad T30 before installing XP Service Pack 3, as the installation instructions suggest. Unfortunately, while I've been able to back up the C: hard drive's files to a USB drive, I can't create a D: recovery partition or an ASR "system settings" disk without a floppy drive. (I also don't have a Windows XP Professional CD--it came pre-loaded on the machine--but I think that creating D: would make the CD unnecessary?) The only mentions I've been able to find about this problem state that, since XP Pro's BIOS doesn't recognize anything but C: or a floppy disk drive (E: I think??) as bootable, one can't use ASR to save the system settings to a CD or USB drive, for example. I can't help but think this is obsolete; after all, there were plenty of laptops and desktops shipped with XP Pro and CD drives rather than floppy disk drives! Can anyone point me to a solution to this problem? BIG bonus good karma points for procedures or products that are free/cheap and really simple to do/use. I've been unemployed for a while & this ThinkPad came to me by good fortune, so upgrading to modern hardware or software really isn't an option. I want to use it with as little chance of malware/microorganisms as possible, but I don't have the OS background knowledge to understand anything technical (yet). Many thanks! I know you said money was tight, but ... an external floppy drive can be had for around $10 online at quite a few places these days. Walmart here carries them for $9.99. Any possibility there? What is it you wish to back up? If it's only your own data that you've created, you wouldn't need the ASR diskette. But if you want to also back up the operating system, then you DO need the ASR floppy. And AFAIK there isn't any way to fool the system into thinking a CD drive is a floppy drive. So, technically, without the ASR, you could back up all except the OS. Sometimes that's enough for people because your own data is often a lot of things that cannot be recreated, such as photographs, correspondence, designs, etc. etc.. The Operating System can be recreated easily but at the expense of a few hours work reinstalling it and all of your applications and getting everything set back up and customized as you want it. There ARE freebie programs out there that will do full backups for you. The biggest caveat with those is to be certain they use Volume Shadow (Copy) Services, meaning they can back up files that are "in use", which windows will not permit and which is necessary to back up the OS (Operating System). I can't recommend any because I don't use them, but they are available and people have discussed them here before. Do you have antivirus and anti-spyware apps installed? Those will help immensely in protecting yourself. A software firewall can be a huge assistance too. I like ZoneAlarm but there are several more available free such as Avast, AVG, and more. HTH, Twayne` |
#6
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Don't have a floppy drive to use with ASR
"Twayne" wrote:
I know you said money was tight, but ... an external floppy drive can be had for around $10 online at quite a few places these days.... But if you want to also back up the operating system, then you DO need the ASR floppy. And AFAIK there isn't any way to fool the system into thinking a CD drive is a floppy drive. I did not know floppy drives were that inexpensive; I only learned all this yesterday & today as I struggled through the ThinkPad's & Lenovo's & Microsoft's "help" screens & articles. Yeah, as I mentioned, I don't have any backup for the OS so I'm pretty nervous about that. Thank you very much for this suggestion!! There ARE freebie programs out there that will do full backups for you. The biggest caveat with those is to be certain they use Volume Shadow (Copy) Services, meaning they can back up files that are "in use", which windows will not permit and which is necessary to back up the OS (Operating System). I can't recommend any because I don't use them, but they are available and people have discussed them here before. Thank you, I'll try searching the forum for those terms. Do you have antivirus and anti-spyware apps installed? Those will help immensely in protecting yourself. A software firewall can be a huge assistance too. I like ZoneAlarm but there are several more available free such as Avast, AVG, and more. While I've been searching for these answers I've used FireFox & avoided loading Flash Player. I read e-mail (on other machines) through AOL & Gmail & haven't been bothered by spam. I've just downloaded Windows Defender & Avira from the official sites. I'll look into further protection after I resolve this backup issue--my brain is full! ;-D HTH, Twayne` It certainly did! Thanks very much. |
#7
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Don't have a floppy drive to use with ASR
"Twayne" wrote:
I know you said money was tight, but ... an external floppy drive can be had for around $10 online at quite a few places these days.... But if you want to also back up the operating system, then you DO need the ASR floppy. And AFAIK there isn't any way to fool the system into thinking a CD drive is a floppy drive. I did not know floppy drives were that inexpensive; I only learned all this yesterday & today as I struggled through the ThinkPad's & Lenovo's & Microsoft's "help" screens & articles. Yeah, as I mentioned, I don't have any backup for the OS so I'm pretty nervous about that. Thank you very much for this suggestion!! There ARE freebie programs out there that will do full backups for you. The biggest caveat with those is to be certain they use Volume Shadow (Copy) Services, meaning they can back up files that are "in use", which windows will not permit and which is necessary to back up the OS (Operating System). I can't recommend any because I don't use them, but they are available and people have discussed them here before. Thank you, I'll try searching the forum for those terms. Do you have antivirus and anti-spyware apps installed? Those will help immensely in protecting yourself. A software firewall can be a huge assistance too. I like ZoneAlarm but there are several more available free such as Avast, AVG, and more. While I've been searching for these answers I've used FireFox & avoided loading Flash Player. I read e-mail (on other machines) through AOL & Gmail & haven't been bothered by spam. I've just downloaded Windows Defender & Avira from the official sites. I'll look into further protection after I resolve this backup issue--my brain is full! ;-D HTH, Twayne` It certainly did! Thanks very much. |
#8
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Don't have a floppy drive to use with ASR
There were extensive threads about backing up the IBM Lenovo Thinkpad
system disk with the hidden partition, how to handle it, etc. on these newsgroups some time ago, and it comes up again and again so if you know how to search for it (I don't) you can find it. I think if you asked in these groups you will find experts willing to help you. ibm.ibmpc.thinkpad comp.sys.laptops.thinkpad comp.sys.laptops FWIW: I have tried just about every scheme for backup that you can imagine, and have finally settled on this which has saved my bacon at least 4 times now, due to unwanted intruders into my system: Obtain a hard drive tray to plug into your DVD slot from Ibm (Lenovo) purchase a hard drive the same size or larger and put it into this tray. Get a copy of Acronis True Image Home or Pro Once a week (I do it every Sunday Morning) or more, make an IMAGE of your C: Drive using Acronis' HARD DISK MANAGEMENT option on the opening screen, which allows you to CLONE the C: drive onto the drive in your tray. Use the "Delete The Existing Partition" option on the clone drive before cloning. (You can't back up the "hidden" partition unless you follow the complicated instructions on how to "un-hide" it, but it's not necessary if you use my process. IBM used to give you a copy of the system discs if you requested it, don't know if they still do. If anything goes wrong, you pop out your Thinkpad corrupted C: drive, insert the clone drive, and in 5 minutes you are at the same point you were last Sunday morning (or whenever). You could also do this using an external drive or over a network, Acronis does it all and it does not use WINDOWS at all, it shells out to Linux and it is all transparent, very clever software writers. I now have a 60 Gb C: drive and I back up to an 80 Gb drive, which is kept wrapped up on the desk. (My R-40 originally came with a 40 Gb drive, large at that time) Before backing up every week, I scan for malware and virus using several programs, clean the registry using JV16 Power Tools, remove all unnecessary files, folders, etc you have accumulated during the week, use OO Defrag using the SPACE option, which causes all the data that can be moved to the beginning of the disk, then do the Clone job. It takes a few hours (scanning the 80 GB drives (I also keep a D: drive in the slot instead of CD/DVD drive) takes up the most time, and the Defrag takes about 10 minutes or so, and the actual cloning takes about 30 minutes or less. Believe me, after losing everything more than once, it is worth the effort. A good computer man could probably automate the process. Good luck and back up often..... On Fri, 25 Sep 2009 22:36:01 -0700, All I Wanted Was a Pony.... wrote: "Twayne" wrote: I know you said money was tight, but ... an external floppy drive can be had for around $10 online at quite a few places these days.... But if you want to also back up the operating system, then you DO need the ASR floppy. And AFAIK there isn't any way to fool the system into thinking a CD drive is a floppy drive. I did not know floppy drives were that inexpensive; I only learned all this yesterday & today as I struggled through the ThinkPad's & Lenovo's & Microsoft's "help" screens & articles. Yeah, as I mentioned, I don't have any backup for the OS so I'm pretty nervous about that. Thank you very much for this suggestion!! There ARE freebie programs out there that will do full backups for you. The biggest caveat with those is to be certain they use Volume Shadow (Copy) Services, meaning they can back up files that are "in use", which windows will not permit and which is necessary to back up the OS (Operating System). I can't recommend any because I don't use them, but they are available and people have discussed them here before. Thank you, I'll try searching the forum for those terms. Do you have antivirus and anti-spyware apps installed? Those will help immensely in protecting yourself. A software firewall can be a huge assistance too. I like ZoneAlarm but there are several more available free such as Avast, AVG, and more. While I've been searching for these answers I've used FireFox & avoided loading Flash Player. I read e-mail (on other machines) through AOL & Gmail & haven't been bothered by spam. I've just downloaded Windows Defender & Avira from the official sites. I'll look into further protection after I resolve this backup issue--my brain is full! ;-D HTH, Twayne` It certainly did! Thanks very much. |
#9
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Don't have a floppy drive to use with ASR
There were extensive threads about backing up the IBM Lenovo Thinkpad
system disk with the hidden partition, how to handle it, etc. on these newsgroups some time ago, and it comes up again and again so if you know how to search for it (I don't) you can find it. I think if you asked in these groups you will find experts willing to help you. ibm.ibmpc.thinkpad comp.sys.laptops.thinkpad comp.sys.laptops FWIW: I have tried just about every scheme for backup that you can imagine, and have finally settled on this which has saved my bacon at least 4 times now, due to unwanted intruders into my system: Obtain a hard drive tray to plug into your DVD slot from Ibm (Lenovo) purchase a hard drive the same size or larger and put it into this tray. Get a copy of Acronis True Image Home or Pro Once a week (I do it every Sunday Morning) or more, make an IMAGE of your C: Drive using Acronis' HARD DISK MANAGEMENT option on the opening screen, which allows you to CLONE the C: drive onto the drive in your tray. Use the "Delete The Existing Partition" option on the clone drive before cloning. (You can't back up the "hidden" partition unless you follow the complicated instructions on how to "un-hide" it, but it's not necessary if you use my process. IBM used to give you a copy of the system discs if you requested it, don't know if they still do. If anything goes wrong, you pop out your Thinkpad corrupted C: drive, insert the clone drive, and in 5 minutes you are at the same point you were last Sunday morning (or whenever). You could also do this using an external drive or over a network, Acronis does it all and it does not use WINDOWS at all, it shells out to Linux and it is all transparent, very clever software writers. I now have a 60 Gb C: drive and I back up to an 80 Gb drive, which is kept wrapped up on the desk. (My R-40 originally came with a 40 Gb drive, large at that time) Before backing up every week, I scan for malware and virus using several programs, clean the registry using JV16 Power Tools, remove all unnecessary files, folders, etc you have accumulated during the week, use OO Defrag using the SPACE option, which causes all the data that can be moved to the beginning of the disk, then do the Clone job. It takes a few hours (scanning the 80 GB drives (I also keep a D: drive in the slot instead of CD/DVD drive) takes up the most time, and the Defrag takes about 10 minutes or so, and the actual cloning takes about 30 minutes or less. Believe me, after losing everything more than once, it is worth the effort. A good computer man could probably automate the process. Good luck and back up often..... On Fri, 25 Sep 2009 22:36:01 -0700, All I Wanted Was a Pony.... wrote: "Twayne" wrote: I know you said money was tight, but ... an external floppy drive can be had for around $10 online at quite a few places these days.... But if you want to also back up the operating system, then you DO need the ASR floppy. And AFAIK there isn't any way to fool the system into thinking a CD drive is a floppy drive. I did not know floppy drives were that inexpensive; I only learned all this yesterday & today as I struggled through the ThinkPad's & Lenovo's & Microsoft's "help" screens & articles. Yeah, as I mentioned, I don't have any backup for the OS so I'm pretty nervous about that. Thank you very much for this suggestion!! There ARE freebie programs out there that will do full backups for you. The biggest caveat with those is to be certain they use Volume Shadow (Copy) Services, meaning they can back up files that are "in use", which windows will not permit and which is necessary to back up the OS (Operating System). I can't recommend any because I don't use them, but they are available and people have discussed them here before. Thank you, I'll try searching the forum for those terms. Do you have antivirus and anti-spyware apps installed? Those will help immensely in protecting yourself. A software firewall can be a huge assistance too. I like ZoneAlarm but there are several more available free such as Avast, AVG, and more. While I've been searching for these answers I've used FireFox & avoided loading Flash Player. I read e-mail (on other machines) through AOL & Gmail & haven't been bothered by spam. I've just downloaded Windows Defender & Avira from the official sites. I'll look into further protection after I resolve this backup issue--my brain is full! ;-D HTH, Twayne` It certainly did! Thanks very much. |
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