Starting from Scratch

  • Thread starter Thread starter horseygal100
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horseygal100

Here's my dilemma. I've had a *broken* laptop for about 6 months now.
I used it for ahwhile just fine, then something happened and I messed
with it. I'm used to dealing with Macintosh, and I totally screwed it
up further.

My question is, is there any possible way I could "ghost" or rather,
erase the harddrive (there's nothing on it I want) and then put a new
system on it without having to take it to a repair shop? I haven't had
good experiences with them?

Also, how much do you think it would cost and is it a good idea for
someone with very little Windows knowledge?

Thanks,
L. Craven
 
Here's my dilemma. I've had a *broken* laptop for about 6 months now.
I used it for ahwhile just fine, then something happened and I messed
with it. I'm used to dealing with Macintosh, and I totally screwed it
up further.

My question is, is there any possible way I could "ghost" or rather,
erase the harddrive (there's nothing on it I want) and then put a new
system on it without having to take it to a repair shop? I haven't had
good experiences with them?

Also, how much do you think it would cost and is it a good idea for
someone with very little Windows knowledge?

Thanks,
L. Craven

In Windows parlance, "ghosting" refer to taking a snapshot of a
hard disk and applying it to a different disk, after a popular imaging
product called Ghost.

I assume this is not what you want - you simply want to reload
Windows onto a blank disk. Boot the machine with your
Win2000 installation CD and follow the prompts. You can do
it yourself - no need to refer to a workshop.
 
To do a clean install, either boot the Windows 2000 install CD-Rom or setup
disks. The set of four install disks can be created from your Windows 2000
CD-Rom; change to the \bootdisk directory on the CD-Rom and execute
makeboot.exe (from dos) or makebt32.exe (from 32 bit) and follow the
prompts.

Setup inspects your computer's hardware configuration and then begins to
install the Setup and driver files. When the Windows 2000 Professional
screen appears, press ENTER to set up Windows 2000 Professional.

Read the license agreement, and then press the F8 key to accept the terms of
the license agreement and continue the installation.

When the Windows 2000 Professional Setup screen appears, all the existing
partitions and the unpartitioned spaces are listed for each physical hard
disk. Use the ARROW keys to select the partitions Press D to delete an
existing partition, If you press D to delete an existing partition, you must
then press L (or press ENTER, and then press L if it is the System
partition) to confirm that you want to delete the partition. Repeat this
step for each of the existing partitions When all the partitions are deleted
press F3 to exit setup, (to avoid unexpected drive letter assignments with
your new install) then restart the pc then when you get to this point in
setup again select the unpartitioned space, and then press C to create a new
partition and specify the size (if required). Windows will by default use
all available space.

Be sure to apply SP4 and these two below to your new install before
connecting to any network. Internet included. (sasser, msblast)
http://download.microsoft.com/download/E/6/A/E6A04295-D2A8-40D0-A0C5-241BFECD095E/W2KSP4_EN.EXE
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS03-043.mspx
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/security/bulletin/MS03-049.mspx

Then

Rollup 1 for Microsoft Windows 2000 Service Pack 4
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/...CF-8850-4531-B52B-BF28B324C662&displaylang=en

--

Regards,

Dave Patrick ....Please no email replies - reply in newsgroup.
Microsoft Certified Professional
Microsoft MVP [Windows]
http://www.microsoft.com/protect

| Here's my dilemma. I've had a *broken* laptop for about 6 months now.
| I used it for ahwhile just fine, then something happened and I messed
| with it. I'm used to dealing with Macintosh, and I totally screwed it
| up further.
|
| My question is, is there any possible way I could "ghost" or rather,
| erase the harddrive (there's nothing on it I want) and then put a new
| system on it without having to take it to a repair shop? I haven't had
| good experiences with them?
|
| Also, how much do you think it would cost and is it a good idea for
| someone with very little Windows knowledge?
|
| Thanks,
| L. Craven
|
 
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