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#1 |
Captain
![]() Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Oz
Posts: 507
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Can anyone help?
I left my rig with the local (useless) IT guy from my (small) home town to 'fix' a few probs and after much time and money it now runs properly but now I've got a whole new batch of probs to deal with. ![]() Not least of which is the hard drive debacle. After talking me into fitting a second hard drive (cool i thought, two hard drives and 1600 GB ![]() Trouble is while most of the installed programmes are easily accessed simply by navigating to D:/ and then opening their .exe files others will not. Wouldn't be so bad except it's mostly important ones that won't (of course). ![]() The strange thing is none of the programmes from D:/ (working or not) show up in the 'uninstall' feature of control panel! ![]() Any one got any ideas how I can fix this? Am running Vista home premium 32 bit. ![]() |
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#2 |
Navy Seal
![]() Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Land of windmills, tulips, wooden shoes and cheese. Lots of cheese.
Posts: 8,467
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Problem is there is no information for those old programs in the registry. Most programs rely heavily on entries in there to find and access files they depend on. Easiest way to fix is to simply reinstall the program. You can point the installers to the existing directories on D: if you want.
It's possible, I suppose, to retrieve the registry entries from the old OS install, both transplanting those is far more work. You'd have to change a lot of the entries since the drive letters changed. Long story short, new OS means reinstalling programs.
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Contritium praecedit superbia. |
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#3 |
Ace of the Deep
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Why didn't he just insert the drive and started the pc? Why reinstall OS? Which was what made (some) of your programs not working. You'll have to reinstall these programs under new OS... You may try to switch drive letters in disc management, but I'm certain this won't work as it'll probably require you to mess with Vista's boot sector as well... Suggestion will be to make a backup of your data, reinstall OS with a new format of both disc and partitioning and then reinstall your programs. Best way to waste a weekend! ![]() If you have an image of your original drive C from before adding the second disc, this would have been the time to use it! But I guess you don't have a such one... only a few care to take the time... ![]() Best of luck! ![]() |
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#4 |
Captain
![]() Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Oz
Posts: 507
Downloads: 33
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The object of the excorcise (pardon the pun) was to reinstall the os in the hope of fixing a heap of bugs that made the rig almost unusable (that actually and eventually worked btw).
He asked me whether their was anything I wanted to keep, as doing so would wipe everything. He asked 'which folders' I wanted! ![]() ![]() I was a bit blown away by that as the machine is (of course) chockers with stuff I need. So when I told him I needed everything he suggested the two drive 'solution'. So, any way, I'm hering ya's, thanks for the reply, but it doesn't help me much. I mean, I've got $400 worth of Microsoft office on my machine but I can't open a word document or spreadsheet or any other bloody document that's not good for wordpad ![]() |
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#5 | ||
Ace of the Deep
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Use the Office Web editors http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/ Other free viewers http://www.officeviewers.com/ Or use OpenOffice for off-line editing/viewing/creating everything you've ever made... http://www.openoffice.org/ Quote:
![]() Oh! And be carefull with the use of **** ![]() |
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#6 |
Captain
![]() Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Oz
Posts: 507
Downloads: 33
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Cheers JK, guess I still got a lot to learn!
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#7 |
Elite Spam Hunter
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Flensburg / Germany
Posts: 1,141
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Changing back the drive letter from D:\ to C:\ could solve the problem.
As long as Windows is up and running, you won't get the allowance to change the drive letter of the disc where Windows is running on. You need a tool which will do the trick in DOS mode. I think I remember a tool called Partition Magic is able to serve you in your situation. As an alternative, Format C:\ or Format D:\ after an external backup will lead you to a virgin setup. Before installing the OS, unplug the disc you don't want your OS on. That way you won't get in trouble with the drive letters. Plug it in after the new installation and nothing will be changed by accident. BUT: Be careful with Partition Magic, b a c k u p y o u r d a t a f i r s t |
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