Warranty is long over. When the laptop stopped recognizing its battery and a new Sony replacement, the previous owner shelved it in disgust and bought a Toshiba. It's been sitting for about a year.
I like the computer since it runs circles around my older HP P4 monster, but it seems that Sony...
Yes, it was in a Ziploc type bag in the deep freeze for 24 hrs. On the other hand, the Western Digital drive that caused the whole problem refused to come back to life after its soak in the freezer so it's a paper weight.
I have a 180GB Seagate that quit working and I froze about a year go and it's still going strong. I don't put any data on it that I would hate to lose as I figure it's going to fail sometime, but so far, no problems since it's 24 hrs in the deep freeze.
I have a lightly used Sony VAIO VGN SZ110 laptop that runs great except for the fact that it doesn't recognize or see the battery. Unplugging it has the same result as if you unplugged a desktop. The battery icon in the task bar shows no battery preset.
There is a brand new battery in the...
I'll try the battery solution first. It's a new mobo but who knows how long the battery has been in or if it's defective. As far as saving the settings goes, yes, I save them after I reset the order (again) each time.
I also know how to reset the BIOS with the jumper and will try that if the...
I have a Micro Star International P7N SLI Platinum Mobo that changes the boot sequence by itself no matter what order I put them in or if I disable all boot devices. It assigns the floppy first, then my optical drives and then my hard drives. If I assign the boot HD, it lives with that unless it...
I noticed that once I was able to get back into my Vista drive, CHKDSK had moved all of my document files into a found0000.chk set of files as well as all my program files. I had about 53 of these files on the disk. I was never able to restore so did a clean install and all seems to be working...
I finally gave up and cloned my reinstalled Vista over it. There were really only a few files that were encrypted and I decided I could live without them. Some I can recreate without too much trouble. I've learned the hard way that I have to back things up. I've never had this much trouble...
tlcousin,
The problem is that I can't even get into the individual files in order to take ownership. The drive says I have ownership but still won't let me access it in Vista although when running XP, I can access it just fine except for the encrypted files of course.
I have taken ownership of the drive and it still says access denied. I have given the administrator account full permissions and still denied.
I have the key for the encrypted files so once I get them copied over, I should be able to resave them once I get the drive cloned.
How do you take ownership of the drive?
I have admin right currently and I have gone into to the properties window for the drive and attempted to give both System and my login full permissions on the drive to no avail. If I can get into the drive, I can find the cert.
Upon reinstalling Vista on another HD due to a catastrophic boot failure, the new install won't let me access the old drive. I CAN access it with XP Home but, I have some encrypted files I would like to recover and XP Home doesn't do encryption. I have managed to salvage just about everything...
I had a similar problem. My machine froze solid and I had to use reset to get it started again. I was in a dual boot configuration with XP as the second OS. Upon restart, Vista said there had been a problem and ran CHKDSK on its own.
After it completed, it seemed to boot up normally as I got...
Thanks for all the tips y'all. I ended up just copying all my essential files to another drive and basically starting over.
I tried to reinstall over the top of my previous installations but I kept getting corrupt file errors whether it was Vista or XP. Once I simply did a completely clean...
Tried to boot from floppy as per instructions, no joy. If I have both drives installed for Vista and XP respectively, the floppy tries to boot into Vista and it gets as far as the crcdisk.dll file and then hangs.
If I disconnect the Vista drive and try to boot into XP, it BSODs.
The XP disc is...
linney,
The XP disk is a commercial copy that came with the original system. It is prior to SP-1a so it is not up to date by any means but has saved my bacon more than once.
I will try your other suggestions and see what happens and let y'all know.
Thanks for the tips, I really do appreciate it.
Update,
Tried to uninstall the Intel drivers as well as the video card drivers and the like and then repair in new set up. No joy.
I was able to repair the XP portion but only with the original Intel Mobo setup. I guess the change over is too much for the system but my theory is that it's the...
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