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There's no such thing as a very advanced approach.
Now the most critical problem is that you can't get into the system, and you can only do what the landlord said. Mount an optical drive and remove the hard drive. I used to do the same thing with my work computer.
There is another method, which I haven't tried, that I saw in a magazine yesterday. Network cloning) Network cloning is through. The Internet or LAN is used to install a system for your computer.
The specific requirements are as follows,1You have a working computer, (though, you're in the office, you should have one.) Hah).
2.If your computer has an integrated network card on the motherboard, it can be used to boot up over the network. A standalone NIC doesn't seem to work.
3.You need to have a pure ghost system disk.
4.Go online and open one"Super one-click netkeeping"The version is.
If your brother can meet these conditions, I'll tell you how to do it next.
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You don't have to simply say use it, or mount an optical drive, remove the hard disk or something, so you don't have to, I will too).
What else can be done about that? It's good to start the USB flash drive in the ghost.,Why is it so troublesome.。
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You don't simply say use a USB flash drive to boot it, or mount an optical drive, remove the hard disk or something, this will be free, and I will too.
If you can, you'll do it.
The system can't get up, the DOS can't get in, what do you want?
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This situation is caused by the loss of original data due to the error of repartitioning the hard disk during the ghost system. If you are not familiar with the recovery operation, if your partition structure is relatively special, simply using partition recovery software, to a large extent, may not be able to find the correct partition data, wrong reconstruction, will destroy the original partition information, causing recovery difficulties.
Be sure not to repartition, format, or anything like that. In that case, the recovered data is incomplete. Maintain the status quo. To a large extent, the original data can be completely restored with proper analysis and processing. Without the need for data recovery software to scan the recovery.
If you simply use data recovery software to scan and recover, it will take time and the effect is difficult to say.
I've recovered a lot of your situation, and many times it's 100% complete recovery of the original partition. The key to this problem of these partitioned data is to protect the state of the hard drive in question. Don't partition it randomly.
With the right handling, the system can be reinstalled without reinstallation.
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To put it simply, re-enter ghost, find the image file, and reinstall it.
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Can you enter the ghost?,You can enter and find the image file to recover.。
Friends on the first floor,Different hard disk partition formats will not cause the above problems,The ghost backup file of the original system is assumed to be backed up in FAT32 format,Even if it is restored on the NTFS format partition,It will eventually be automatically converted back to the FAT32 format of the backup file。 >>>More
1. No need to do the system must format the C drive, and MS-DOS must also be installed in the C drive. >>>More
First, enter the pure DOS state ......You first have to install the virtual floppy drive or dwarf DOS toolbox in your system, or you can take a Windows 98 installation CD, choose to boot from the CD, and you can enter the pure DOS. (You're now .......)) >>>More
I don't know the full name!
You can use it to back up and restore backups. >>>More
Ghost's Linux support is terrible.
Linux has its own unique backup methods underneath. Generally, Linux directly compresses all system files into a package, and when restoring, it is unzipped into a new partition, and then re-grub-install to restore the grub boot. There's no need to look for software support at all. >>>More