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Try restoring in command-line mode.
If the system fault is very serious and you cannot enter normal mode or safe mode, you can follow the method described above to enter the boot mode menu, select "Safe mode with command line prompt", log in as administrator, enter the "%systemroot% windows system32estore" directory, and directly run the files in it to restore according to the prompts.
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Are you using ghost for backups? If it is, you can restore it with win98 or ghost disk! For specific operations, use win98 to start into DOS, find the backup file of ghost, and the specific operation can first take a look at the restore operation of ghost.
Install the above operation and you can restore it
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The system you said is broken, is it no longer bootable, then if you are using ghost to make a backup, just find a disk with ghost software, start it under DOS, and restore it to your original system disk first. Just reboot it.
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If you want to restore, you have to back up before it is paralyzed, if there is no backup, you can't restore it, XP comes with a backup tool, press the ntbackup command to back up and restore the backup operation under the operation, and the backup files are best not to be placed in the original machine, to put it in the U disk or other machines, otherwise the machine is paralyzed, and you can't find the backup file.
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Open the backup restore program, click Restore, find the backup file, and execute the !!
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If you have dos, you will enter dos, and if you don't have it, you will use the close. Recover with ghost.
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Click the Start program attachment System Tools System Restore.
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Not sure how you backed it up.
If you want to back up, I personally feel that it is best to use ghost.
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You make it clear! What tool are you using to back up your system!
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1. There is basically no difference between reinstalling the system and making the system, both of which are to reinstall the operating system to the computer.
2. The backup system is to place a copy of the installed system in a partition other than the operating system partition (generally referred to as the C drive).
3. Restore the system, provided that the system has been backed up, copy the system files that have been backed up in other partitions other than the operating system partition and re-copy them to the original installed partition of the operating system.
1. Open the Windows 10 system and click "Settings" in the start menu.
2, and then, tap on the "Update & Security" option in the settings.
3. Click on the "Recover" button in the window.
4. Then, select "Start System Recovery" in the recovery.
5. Select the files you want to keep in the window.
6. Finally, click Next to start the restoration and solve the problem.
I'm going to reinstall, I'm reinstalled, I'm activating without success, so I can't open it
The minimum special effects should be playable.
You should have been poisoned. First, you press Ctrl+Alt+Del at the same time to open the task management, then look at the process to see which process is taking up the most CPU, and stop it (note, except for the last system idle process).After stopping, your computer is basically normal, and then ** the latest version of the antivirus software, the whole antivirus once, it is best to kill the virus in safe mode. >>>More
First, your "My Computer"-Properties-Hardware-Device Manager, only to find that there is no "? The current system has a lot of drivers, and XP identifies and installs it by itself during the installation process. >>>More
I don't know if there is a Vista optimizer, if there is, it will be easy to do.