Last month our speedy P90 finally died. It won’t boot at all, saying something like C: not found.
My question is this. Is there a way to recover some files from the HD? There are some pictures we took of our dog before he died on there and I would reaaaaaaaally like to get them off so I can burn them to a CD.
Even if I take it in to a Computer store and have to pay to have it done…I just want the pictures.
Try what Ringo sez. If it really is reaaaaaaaally important, you’ll want to check around for data recovery places. Almost all “Computer stores” that actually do this kind of thing just send it to a real data recovery place.
P.S. - Data recovery is not cheap - you’ll want to exhaust the other possibilities first.
I haven’t checked the battery. This all happened without warning during The Great Blackout of 2003
I have a brand new computer and I don’t want to risk installing the HD as a slave on this one.
Nanoda
It’s really only a couple of files. I don’t want everything, just a few files. It is really important to me, and my fiance to have the pictures of our doggie. Like I said, I’d pay. OR! If anyone around Ottawa could help out…lol
From the sound of things, it might very well be a CMOS memory problem. You’ll need to enter the CMOS setup and check to see if your hard drive parameters are correctly set. Pentium 1 class mainboards didn’t always have an autodetect option for drive settings. If yours does, be sure it’s set to that. If not, and you don’t know the correct settings for your drive, post the drive make and model number and i’ll see if I can pull it up for you.
Umm… I think the idea was to temporarily install the possibly defective P-90 hard drive as a slave to the good new hard drive. Unless there is a virus issue (and it doesn’t sound like it) this should not present any “risk” to the new drive. The working system will either see it or it won’t.
The easiest thing to do (in my experience ) is simply to disconnect the new CD drive temporarily and use that connector.
Astro said what I meant to say. Just hook it up as a slave, boot and see if it’s there, and then copy what’s readable to your good computer’s C: drive.
I know there’s companies that can recover data from hard drives that have even been dropped in water. But, you’re going to be paying ~$800 or more from what I’ve heard. CD-R backups every few months are a lot cheaper!
This computer was VERY old, had a 4x CD-ROM, 16 meg ram and a 2 gig HD…It didn’t have a CD-RW, or I would have done that.
As for setting it up as a slave…I’m not that technically inclined. That was my ex-husbands job.
I will however get a friend to hook it up as a slave to our new computer and see if we can just copy the stuff we need.
You can try download.com & search for ‘recovery’ there might be some programs you can try.
Other odd methods involve putting the hd in the ice box (freezer) overnight or banging it lightly or getting a circuit board from a matching HD & putting it on & trying that.