Wednesday, November 18, 2009

create any windows bootable usb drive

Thank God, finally someone made a good application to make us easier install Windows from an USB Flashdrive, Pen drive, Flashdisk, etc... with WinToFlash you can install Windows XP/2003/Vista/2008/7 from USB Flashdrive easily.


WinToFlash Step by step Guide Install Windows XP from USB Flash drive:


Requirements:
-USB Flash disk/Flash drive/Pen drive/Thumb drive, etc
-Computer with CD/DVD drive to build this Windows XP setup Flashdisk (or you may use computer without CD/DVD drive, but you have to copy Windows XP setup files from another computer to your hard disk)
-Computer with or without CD/DVD drive (e.g. Aspire One)


Step 1:


Download WinToFlash here


Step 2:
Extract the zip file, then double click on WinToFlash.exe


Step 3:
Click Accept button...


Step 4:
This program will transfer Windows setup from CD or DVD to flash drive Recommended to switch on Wizard mode for users have no experience of Windows setup fine tuning Windows setup transfer wizard Following basic instructions you will transfer Windows setup program to flash drive and install Windows on PC have no CD or DVD drive
Click the button to enter Wizard mode...


Step 5:
This program will help you to install Windows from a flash
To access other features and advanced options swicth to advanced mode (for advanced users).
for now, we will use wizard mode instead of advanced mode, so click Next...


step 6:
Specify locations of files and drive
on Windows files path click Select button


Step 7:
Select CD/DVD drive that contain Windows XP CD or folder that contain Windows XP files... then click OK


step 8:
Specify locations of files and drive
on USB drive click Select button


Step 9:
Select USB Flash drive ... then click OK


Step 10:
Specify locations of files and drive
Click Next button...


Step 11:
Select "I Accepted the terms of the license agreement" then click Continue...


Step 12:
Warning! Formatting will erase ALL DATA on target disk. To format press OK, to quit press Cancel
Click OK


Step 13:
Please wait while WinToFlash transferring Windows setup to flash drive




Step 14:
Finished... click Next then Exit
USB Flash drive ready...


On computer without CD/DVD drive (e.g. Aspire One)


you must change the first boot order to USB Flash drive from BIOS. How to do this?


Change Boot order from BIOS:
This is just for example (Aspire 4710)
your BIOS interface may be slightly different


Step 1:
Plug a Flash drive into a USB port on your computer/laptop


Step 2:
Turn on your laptop then hit F2 rapidly (or Del for some other machine)
then go to Boot tab > change boot order > then hit F10 key to Save and Exit


Now you can boot from USB Flash drive, first select
1st, text mode setup (Boot from flash again after finished)
then... on the first restart, select
2nd, GUI mode setup, continue setup + 1st start of Windows
install window XP as usual...


Good luck...
please let me know if you find a problem...
and help the Author by report any application bug (and spelling too)

Monday, November 16, 2009

step by step to install windows server 08-How to

Intro:


Installing Windows Server 2008 is pretty straightforward and is very much like installing Windows Vista, but I thought I'd list the necessary steps here for additional information. For those of you who have never installed Vista before, the entire installation process is different than it used to be in previous Microsoft operating systems, and notably much easier to perform.
Note: Windows Server 2008 can also be installed as a Server Core installation, which is a cut-down version of Windows without the Windows Explorer GUI. Because you don’t have the Windows Explorer to provide the GUI interface that you are used to, you configure everything through the command line interface or remotely using a Microsoft Management Console (MMC). The Server Core can be used for dedicated machines with basic roles such as Domain controller/Active Directory Domain Services, DNS Server, DHCP Server, file server, print server, Windows Media Server, IIS 7 web server and Windows Server Virtualization virtual server.









Follow this procedure to install Windows Server 2008:

1. Insert the appropriate Windows Server 2008 installation media
into your DVD drive. If you don't have an installation DVD for Windows Server
2008, you can download one for free from Microsoft's Windows 2008 Server Trial
website.


2. Reboot the computer.





3. When prompted for an installation language and other regional options, make
your selection and press Next.




4. Next, press Install Now to begin the installation process.



5. Product activation is now also identical with that found in
Windows Vista. Enter your Product ID in the next window, and if you want to
automatically activate Windows the moment the installation finishes, click
Next.




If you do not have the Product ID available right now, you can leave
the box empty, and click Next. You will need to provide the Product ID later, after
the server installation is over. Press No.




6. Because you did not provide the correct ID, the installation
process cannot determine what kind of Windows Server 2008 license you own,
and therefore you will be prompted to select your correct version in the next
screen, assuming you are telling the truth and will provide the correct ID to prove
your selection later on.




7. If you did provide the right Product ID, select the Full version of
the right Windows version you're prompted, and click Next.




8. Read and accept the license terms by clicking to select the
checkbox and pressing Next.




9. In the "Which type of installation do you want?" window, click the
only available option – Custom (Advanced).




10. In the "Where do you want to install Windows?", if you're
installing the server on a regular IDE hard disk, click to select the first disk,
usually Disk 0, and click Next.




If you're installing on a hard disk that's
connected to a SCSI controller, click Load Driver and insert the media provided by
the controller's manufacturer.
If you're installing in a Virtual Machine environment, make sure you read the
"Installing the Virtual SCSI Controller Driver for Virtual Server 2005 on Windows
Server 2008"
If you must, you can also click Drive Options and manually create a partition on
the destination hard disk.


11. The installation now begins, and you can go and have lunch.
Copying the setup files from the DVD to the hard drive only takes about one
minute. However, extracting and uncompressing the files takes a good deal
longer. After 20 minutes, the operating system is installed. The exact time it takes
to install server core depends upon your hardware specifications. Faster disks will
perform much faster installs… Windows Server 2008 takes up approximately 10
GB of hard drive space.




The installation process will reboot your
computer, so, if in step #10 you inserted a floppy disk (either real or virtual),
make sure you remove it before going to lunch, as you'll find the server hanged
without the ability to boot (you can bypass this by configuring the server to boot
from a CD/DVD and then from the hard disk in the booting order on the server's
BIOS)


12. Then the server reboots you'll be prompted with the new
Windows Server 2008 type of login screen. Press CTRL+ALT+DEL to log
in.




13. Click on Other User.



14. The default Administrator is blank, so just type Administrator
and press Enter.




15. You will be prompted to change the user's password. You have
no choice but to press Ok.




16. In the password changing dialog box, leave the default
password blank (duh, read step #15…), and enter a new, complex, at-least-
7-characters-long new password twice. A password like "topsecret" is not valid
(it's not complex), but one like "T0pSecreT!" sure is. Make sure you remember
it.




17. Someone thought it would be cool to nag you once more, so
now you'll be prompted to accept the fact that the password had been changed.
Press Ok.






18. Finally, the desktop appears and that's it, you're logged on and
can begin working. You will be greeted by an assistant for the initial server
configuration, and after performing some initial configuration tasks, you will be
able to start working.





for info regarding server 08 click here







Saturday, November 14, 2009

Enter pc without password

Most pc's need passwords to enter the system with user accounts.

Here is a way to enter pc without password and further to change the password.


1.During startup it displays the user account

2.If u click the user account it asks for password

3.Only if u know the password u can enter.At that time press Alt+Ctr l+delete two times

4.It displays a dialog box with the user name.

5.Remove the user name and type 'administrator' without quotes.

6.For password don't give anything and click ok.Thats it u entered the pc.

7.Further u can change the password for any user accounts in the control panel->user accounts.

8.For resetting the passwords go to control panel and then user accounts.Click the user account click remove password.Thats it password removed.For resetting the password it doest ask for old password.


With the above procedure u can enter pc without password and can have access to all features by user.

If administrator password is given,follow the steps to reset administrator password.
How to recover Windows XP administator password
Lost User Passwords. (Windows XP)

If you have lost or forgotten a user account password in Win XP, simply log in as the computer administrator, and go to control panel, user accounts. Here you will be able to reset the password for any of the systems user accounts.

Lost Administrator Password. (Windows XP)

Slightly more work needed if you lose or forget the Windows XP administrator password.

First reboot Windows XP in safe mode by re-starting the computer and pressing F8 repeated as the computer starts up. Then (in safe mode) click Start and then click Run. In the open box type "control userpasswords2" without the quotes - I have just used quotes to differentiate what you have to type.

You will now have access to all the user accounts, including the administrators account and will be able to reset the lost password.

Just click the administrators user account, and then click Reset Password.

You will need to add a new password in the New password and the Confirm new password boxes, and confirm by clicking OK.

All done, you have recovered the lost administrators password!

 Though lot of people know it might help the people who dont.

If BIOS password is set

1.Remove CMOS battery and fix it again.It removes bios password.

So finally u can enter pc without knowing BIOs ,Administrator,user passwords

Sunday, November 8, 2009

FIFA10-Full rip


Minimum system requirements

Processor: 2.4 GHz (single core)
RAM: 512 MB in Windows XP or 1 GB in Windows Vista
Video Card: GeForce 6600 or better, ATI Radeon 9800 Pro or better, with support for Shader 2.0, with embedded memory of 128 MB, with support for DirectX 9.0c
Sound: with support for DirectX 9.0c

Recommended system requirements

Processor: 3.2 GHz (single core) or 2.4 GHz (dual core)
RAM: 1 GB (XP) or 2GB (Vista)
Video Card: GeForce 7800 or better, ATI Radeon x1800 or better with Shader 2.0 support, with built-in memory, 256 MB, with support for DirectX 9.0c
Sound: with support for DirectX 9.0c

Unrar
2. Burn or Mount
3. Install (need 1 GB Ram + 9 GB Free Disk)
4. Play

DOWNLOAD:

http://lh3.ggpht.com/_TkvrhfMySL4/SvOE9eCe4EI/AAAAAAAAANI/aLdofTw1_W8/download-icon.jpg


pass: lordshaw


Photoshop-Portable

Description:

Adobe Photoshop - the essential software for perfecting your images, Adobe Photoshop CS4 now offers productivity and workflow enhancements, powerful new editing tools, and breakthrough compositing capabilities.

A new face for Photoshop
CS4 sports a new interface for Photoshop and Bridge. Called the Application Frame, the new Photoshop user interface combines:

* The ability to float, dock and group image windows together with a new Arrange Documents feature to help distribute the windows around the screen,
* A new Application Bar which integrates the features and functions of the title and control bars found in previous versions of Photoshop,
* A Screen Mode utility that can be used to individually control the display of documents on multiple monitors,
* New Adjustments and Masks panels, and
* A task based work flow approach to saving, displaying and using workspaces.

System Requirements

Windows

* 1.8GHz or faster processor
* Microsoft® Windows® XP with Service Pack 2 (Service Pack 3 recommended) or Windows Vista® Home Premium, Business, Ultimate, or Enterprise with Service Pack 1 (certified for 32-bit Windows XP and 32-bit and 64-bit Windows Vista)
* 512MB of RAM (1GB recommended)
* 1GB of available hard-disk space for installation; additional free space required during installation (cannot install on flash-based storage devices)
* 1,024x768 display (1,280x800 recommended) with 16-bit video card
* Some GPU-accelerated features require graphics support for Shader Model 3.0 and OpenGL 2.0
* DVD-ROM drive
* QuickTime 7.2 software required for multimedia features
* Broadband Internet connection required for online services

DOWNLOAD:

http://lh3.ggpht.com/_TkvrhfMySL4/SvOE9eCe4EI/AAAAAAAAANI/aLdofTw1_W8/download-icon.jpg


WORLD CRAFT



In the 21st century, a mysterious object lands on Earth ending all known civilization. WorldShift is set thousands of years after those events, when the human civilization is no more than just a fading myth. The remains of the mysterious object, known as Shard Zero, are still spreading its Plague and reshaping the Earth. The human race has developed a new culture and are now living in five shielded mega-cities, struggling to survive from day to day. The rest of the Earth is populated by what is known to be the Tribes, successors of the early humans that were affected by the Plague, and the Cult, a mysterious alien race with unknown origins

GAMEPLAY:

In WorldShift, there are no technology trees featuring hundreds of upgrades; instead, WorldShift allows the players to discover and acquire a vast number of items and powerful relics that they can use to freely change their gameplay and preferred tactics and to attack their enemies. The players will gather items as they fight their opponents and as rewards for completing missions. There is a two-tiered unit system, with stronger officer units and then more common basic units. The official website says WorldShift will be centered around unique cooperative multiplayer gameplay.

Many units in WorldShift have power which the player can spend to perform special actions such as spells, healing, or stronger attacks. Some units also have shields able to absorb the strength of an incoming attack partly or entirely.


DOWNLOAD

http://lh3.ggpht.com/_TkvrhfMySL4/SvOE9eCe4EI/AAAAAAAAANI/aLdofTw1_W8/download-icon.jpg





Common Errors in PC-Troubleshooting

1. MONITOR LED IS BLINKING
Check all the connections like Monitor Cable, Data cables,RAM, Display Card , CPU connections.


2. CONTINUOUS THREE BEEPS
Problem in RAM Connection.


3. THREE BEEPS (1 Long 2 Short)
Problem in Display Card Connection


4. THREE LONG BEEPS PERIOD WISE
Problem in BIOS or RAM (Basic Input Output System)


5. CONTINUOUS NON-STOP BEEPING
Key Board Problem (i.e.; Some Key is pressed for Longer time)


6. FDD LED IS GLOWING CONTINUOUSLY
Data cable to be connected properly (twisted cable).


7. NO DISPLAY ON THE SCREEN AT ALL
Hard Disk cable connected wrongly. Connect rightly seeing the Red mark (Faces power supply) and then Restart.


8. POWER LED IS OFF
a. Check main power cord
b. Check S.M.P.S.
c. Check Mother Board connection


9. SHOWING CMOS ERROR
Replace 3 Volt battery of Mother Board . Set Original Settings Manually.(Refer CMOS Setup chart)
Enter your search termsSubmit search form


10. SHOWING FDD ERROR OR FLOPPY DRIVE IS NOT WORKING PROPERLY
Check Power cord of FDD , Data Cables , set CMOS & Finally the Check drive.


11. SHOWING HDD ERROR OR HARD DISK FAILURE
a. Check Power Cord
b. Check connection of HDD
c. Check Data cable
d. Check Hard Disk parameters in CMOS or Auto detecting Setting Partitions by Fdisk Command, then format it to set track 0.


12. MOTHER BOARD HANGS DUE TO UNSTABILIZED POWER SUPPLY
a. Check S.M.P.S
b. RAM not functioning properly.
c. Software problem (due to using pirated software)
d. CPU fan not functioning properly.


13. DANCING SCREEN
a. Check Display card connection
b. Virus Problem
c. Video Memory Problem


14. SHAKING SCREEN
a. Earthing problem
b. Magnetic waves comes around.


15. CPU CABINET SHOCK
a. Check Earthing
b. Check main power cord.


16. NON-SYSTEM DISK ERROR
a. Floppy Drive having different disk (Non-Bootable Disk) OR CMOS Parameters for Hard Disk may not be set properly.
b. Hard Disk Partitions may not be created.
c. Hard Disk may not be formatted.


17. MISSING OPERATING SYSTEM
The System files missing namely Ie; command.com ** - User File IO.SYS & MS_DOS.SYS ** - Hidden Files. These above three files required for Start up of the system that can be transferred by using SYS C: Command OR While the time of formatting by using Format c:/u/s


18. MISSING COMMAND INTERPRETOR
May the file Command.com is corrupted OR Infected by Virus OR Some one has Erased it.


19. SHOWING I/O ERROR
a. The type of Hard Disk in CMOS may not be set properly.
b. Operating system used for formatting is not valid


20. SHOWING DIVIDE OVER- FLOW MESSAGE
a. May some Directories or Files crash with other files.
b. Use CHKDSK/F or SCANDISK Command to correct it.


21. HARD DISK MAKING NOISE WHILE PROCESSING
a. Unstabilized power supply.
b. Check for Loose Contact.
c. Do not use Y Connectors for Hard Disk.
d. It may create Bad Sector OR Weak Hard Disk.


22. HARD DISK HANGS WHILE PROCESSING
Check for Bad Sector by using CHKDSK or SCANDISK Command. If found format the Hard Disk and set Partition before that area.(This is the only procedure to use Hard Disk with Bad Sector) OR (To avoid Bad Sectors use Standard Power Supply)


23. HARD DISK NOT DETECTED
a. Check Power Connector
b. Check Data Cables
c. Check Jumpers


24. PARTITION NOT SHOWN
Operating System where the Hard Disk formatted is not supported with present Mother Board. For Eg: Hard Disk formatted with Pentium System will hide their partitions for 486 System.


25. MMX/DLL FILE MISSING
May the above files may be corrupted due to power failure or Virus. Make available above files from other Computer. OR Reinstall Windows 98 Operating System. (This procedure will not make any effect on existing Data).


26. WINDOWS REGISTRY ERROR
This will happen due to sudden ON/OFF of the system. Final solution is to Reinstall Operating System.


27. DISPLAY COLOUR DOES NOT MATCH
a. Configure Display Card properly with their CD.
b. The Standard setting for Windows is set it to 800x600 for better performance.


28. UNKNOWN DEVICE FOUND
May the Driver utility is not provided with operating system . Insert Driver CD and install software for the above Device

Friday, November 6, 2009

Heroes Over Europe-mediafire





NAME….: Heroes Over Europe
SIZE….: DVD
COMPANY.: Atari PROTECTION.: None
DATE….: 14 September 2009 GAME TYPE..: Action, Flight

RELEASE NOTES

A great WW2 dogfight game with pure next gen action,physics, graphics and AI Heroes over Europe is the sequel to thehigh-selling World War II flight combat game, Heroes of the Pacific.Focusing on the European aerial battles of World War II from 1940 to1945, Heroes over Europe follows the Allied campaign from the attackson London to the destruction of Berlin. Players will once again sit inthe cockpits of the iconic aircraft of the conflict and be forced tosurvive the most
intense dogfights seen in any next generation flight game. All of thisaction will take place over stunning and meticulous environments,including the faithfully recreated cities of London and Berlin.

Hardware

Core 2 Duo 2.66 GHz,
2 GB RAM,
Graphic card 256 MB (GeForce 8800 or better),
9 GB HDD, Windows XP/Vista

INSTALL INSTRUCTIONS

1. Unrar/Mount or Burn
2. Install the game.
3. Run the game.









Windows XP Repair Guide

The "it" in this case is XP's most powerful rebuild/repair option, and yet Microsoft chose to hide it behind seeming dead ends, red herrings, and a recycled interface that makes it hard to find and (at first) somewhat confusing to use.

But it's worth exploring because this option lets you completely and nondestructively rebuild, repair, or refre$h an existing XP installation while leaving already-installed software alone (no reinstallation needed!).
It also leaves user accounts, names, and passwords untouched and takes only a fraction of the time a full, from-scratch reinstall does.
And unlike a traditional full reinstall, this option doesn't leave you with two copies of XP on your hard drive.
Instead, you end up with just the original installation, but repaired, refre$hed, and ready to go.

When you're facing the prospects of a total reformat/reinstall, stop!
Try the no-reformat reinstall technique i'm about to illustrate, and you just may get your XP setup running again in a fraction of the time and with a fraction of the hassle of a grand wipe-and-restore.

The no-reformat reinstall operation starts with a normal boot from an XP setup CD

Start your PC with the setup CD in a drive, and hit a key when you see the following screen:


Boot from your XP setup CD to gain access to the no-reformat reinstall option.

If instead of booting to the CD your PC boots from the hard drive, you may need to modify your PC's "boot order."
It's easy and only takes a minute to make the change so that the PC will check for a bootable CD before trying to boot from the hard drive.

Once your PC starts to boot from the CD, you'll see something like what's shown in Screen 2:


Let the CD boot proceed normally and automatically through "Setup is inspecting your computer's hardware..." to the "Windows Setup" screen.

After a minute or two, you'll see the "Windows Setup/Setup is starting Windows" screen, shown in Screen Three.

Don't be alarmed:
It's still just the setup process running, and nothing's been changed on your PC yet.



The "Starting Windows" screen is a bit of an overstatement; it's just the setup process getting going.
Windows, as we normally think of it, isn't running yet, and no changes have been made to your PC.

Soon after Screen Three, you'll be presented with the normal "Welcome to Setup" screen, as shown in Screen Four.


The "Welcome to Setup" screen is poorly worded; the "Repair" option we want isn't the one explicitly offered here.
In fact, the repair option we want isn't shown at all.
See the text for full detail.


The poorly worded options in Screen Four lead many users astray.
The only mention of "Repair" here is "...repair a Windows XP installation using Recovery Console..." but that's not the no-reformat repair/reinstall we're seeking. (The Recovery Console Repair option is useful in its own right for fixing relatively minor problems with the operating system, and we fully explore it in the links listed above.)

The repair option we do want--a nondestructive, no-reformat reinstall--is actually hidden beneath the Setup option, "To set up Windows XP now, press ENTER."

So hit Enter, just as if you were setting up Windows afresh and from scratch.

The next screen, about licensing, gives no reassurances that you're on the right path for a nondestructive repair/reinstall--in fact, it's the same screen you see when you're setting XP up on a virgin hard drive.
But this is only the first of many screens that the Repair option will borrow from a full-blown setup.
Press F8 to accept the licensing terms and to go on.

Next, the XP setup process will show another screen that you may recall from your initial setup of XP. It searches for "a previous version of Microsoft Windows."
In our case, we're not replacing a previous version of Windows, but rather repairing the very same version that's on the setup CD--but that's OK; it's just another poorly worded screen.


Our intent is to repair the same version of Windows as is on the setup CD, but another poorly worded screen makes it seem like you're upgrading a previous version of Windows or installing one anew.
But don't let the bad wording alarm you; we're still on track for a nondestructive reinstall.

Screen Seven finally shows verbiage that's not recycled from the generic XP setup, but is specific to our Repair task.
Setup should find your damaged copy of XP and present it for repair, as shown:



At long last, Setup begins to refer to a Repair option. Here, Setup should have found your damaged XP setup, which you can select and then press R to start the nondestructive repair.


If your damaged copy of XP isn't highlighted in the list box, highlight it now. When it's selected, press R to start the repair process.

The Repair process then selectively deletes system files in the \Windows folder and subfolders and copies undamaged replacement files from the setup CD to their proper locations.



The Repair process then works on the current setup's Registry, leaving much of it intact and rebuilding the rest.


There's no fanfare, but this is one of the nicer parts of the Repair process: Setup retains what it can in the current Registry so that already-installed hardware and software will remain installed.

With the system files freshly copied and the Registry ready for rebuilding, the system needs to reboot.
Remove the CD from the drive so that the PC will boot to the hard drive instead of to the CD.

The first Repair reboot will take longer than normal.
Don't be alarmed. Also, don't be alarmed when Setup resumes.
Once again, it will appear that you're performing a full, from-scratch setup; there's nothing on-screen to indicate that you're repairing an existing version of XP.
But although the setup screens are the same as what you'd see in a full install, it's still a repair process, as will become clearer in a moment.

The first two of the Repair setup screens ask for your language preferences and product key.
Enter these normally.




When Setup resumes, it will appear that you're performing a full, from-scratch setup.
But don't worry--you're still indeed repairing your existing version of XP.

Many of the next few Repair screens will also be familiar.
The "installing devices" screen, for example, is identical to the one you normally see during a full, from-scratch setup.
But Repair is actually retaining much of the current setup's configuration and so will move through these steps faster than in a full setup.


The Repair version of the setup process skips or shortens many steps because it already has the information it needs from the existing setup.
For example, Repair's "installing devices" and the network setup steps are both much faster and require less user input than a new setup does.

The setup screens don't reflect the fact that a Repair proceeds much faster than a normal, full setup. In fact, the time estimates in the setup progress bar will be way off.
You'll be done in far less time than the progress bar predicts.



Just as with "installing devices," the network setup proceeds rapidly because Setup can re-use many of the configuration details from the current installation.
In fact, a Repair setup takes far less time than the installation progress bar indicates.

When this portion of the Repair is done, you'll see a "completing installation" screen:



The "completing installation" screen means most of the heavy lifting is done, and you're just minutes away from finishing the repair operation.

Setup then reboots your PC again, and this reboot will also take longer than usual. This is normal.

With the bulk of the repair work done, your PC needs to reboot once more and will do so automatically.
The reboot will take a bit longer than a standard boot, but this is normal.
After the reboot, you'll be brought to an abbreviated version of the "Welcome To Windows" setup pages.

You'll be asked if you want to register and--depending on how badly hosed the previous installation was--you may or may not be asked to reactivate the copy of Windows.
Next, the setup software handles the final networking details and then offers a "thank you" screen.


In most cases, the system will now reboot for a final time.
The Repair is done. It's a normal boot, bringing you to the normal choices for login.

With a final, fully normal reboot, you're done.
Your copy of XP should be as good as new, but with all your previously installed hardware, software, and user configuration data undamaged!


If all has gone as planned, you'll find all the user accounts and passwords intact, all the hardware devices set up as before, and all the previously installed software still installed and configured.
In fact, if all has gone as planned, the only significant change will be that whatever problem your copy of XP was previously experiencing will now be gone!

You now have a range of repair tools at your disposal, ranging from simple on-the-fly fixes such as Registry cleaning and safe Mode fixes to Recovery Console fixes, and, now, a nondestructive, no-reformat repair/rebuild option.

With this information, you should almost never have to face a dreaded start-over-from-scratch reformat/reinstall of XP!

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

How To see Deleted History

To see Deleted History follow the steps:-

1. Boot into "safe mode command prompt" using F8

2. Go to Root (C:\) by typing CD\

3. Now type C:\ del index.dat /s

4. Press enter


now you can see the deleted files

link

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