If it were me, I'd reinstall Vista.
In your current state, if your hard drive crashes, you're going to have to
get everything reinstalled anyway, and you'd be worse off because you'd
probably have data loss. Yes the reinstall will be painful but you've been
through the process recently and it should be fresh in your mind on what you
need to do. A year from now, it will hurt much worse.
You might be leaning towards going back to XP and I don't blame you. I think
you got a bad apple with your Vista install and I think you'll be pleasantly
surprised at how well it works when the installation is done properly.
Though I can't say for certain that bad imaging is to blame, I can say that
everyone I've talked to who clean installed over the likely bad image is no
longer having backup problems. There may be some magic fix out there for the
VSS error but so far I haven't found it. I bet there are other things broken
on your system as well.
If you do a clean install, here's what I recommend: do the clean install and
then take a Complete PC Backup BEFORE installing any applications. This will
allow you to make sure the Complete PC Backup is working and isn't breaking
due to some incompatible application. Then make sure that the apps you do
install are compatible with Vista.
Once your applications are completely installed, take another backup and
save it to DVD (if you can). Saving to hard disk is fine for periodic
Complete PC Backups (even preferred), but putting your original image on DVD
ensures that that particular point-in-time image won't eventually be purged
as new images are created.
--
This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights.
Want to learn more about Windows file and storage technologies? Visit our
team blog at
http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/default.aspx.
"Mark Norris" <> wrote in message
news:94240E75-5EA7-498F-9FB6-...
> Thanks for your response Jill ... I must now think very hard about your
> recommendation for a clean install of Vista to try and solve this problem.
>
> This puts me in a dilema which I would like your experienced opinion on
> ...
>
> ... The principal reason why I wanted to make a 'Complete PC Backup' is
> because it has taken me such an extraordinary amount of time to set up
> this
> new PC with a variety of 'industry standard' programmes which have all
> required updates & downloads & contact with software manufacturers &
> premium
> phoneline calls, etc, etc, to get them to function with the Vista
> operating
> system. Other than from yourself, no one has been of much help and no one
> is
> prepared to take any 'responsibility' for the problems of glitches and
> incompatibility of Vista. I have no free support from Microsoft because
> the
> computer manufacturer installed Vista ... and the computer
> manufacturer
> will not provide any free support with 'software issues'.
>
> ... Having already thought 'I can't possibly go through all that setting
> up
> process again, so I will purchase an external hard drive to create a
> Complete
> PC Backup' ...
>
> ... it now appears that I will have to start the entire process again?
>
> So, in your experienced opinion, do you think I should stick with Vista
> and
> re-install everything from scratch, hoping that most of my problems will
> be
> OK on a clean install ... or, as the teething problems &
> incompatibility
> problems of Vista may still be ongoing for a while, should I play safe and
> simply install Windows XP?
>
> I'd be most grateful for your opinion before I proceed.
>
> With many thanks,
>
> Mark Norris
>
>
> "Jill Zoeller [MSFT]" wrote:
>
>> I'm afraid I don't have a good answer for you at this point. You're not
>> doing anything wrong, and as you showed in another post, you have plenty
>> of
>> free space. I have worked with two other customers on this error and
>> neither
>> case is resolved. We know it's a Volume Shadowcopy Service (VSS) error,
>> not
>> strictly a Backup error.
>>
>> If you're using a brand new computer, my hunch is that the problem is due
>> to
>> the way the computer was imaged. (By imaged, I mean the way in which the
>> OEM
>> put the operating system onto the computer.) I've worked with several
>> customers here who are experiencing bizarre problems using Backup and
>> Complete PC Backup, not just the error you report but other equally
>> unusual
>> errors. Of the customers I've sent back to their OEM for help with
>> reinstalling Vista, they all reported success with using these backup
>> tools
>> afterwards.
>>
>> So, my advice is to contact the company that sold you the computer and
>> ask
>> for assistance in reinstalling Vista. This is the only way I know that
>> will
>> get you back up and running with functional backup tools. A clean install
>> will also address other issues lurking that you haven't encountered yet.
>>
>> --
>> This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no
>> rights.
>>
>> Want to learn more about Windows file and storage technologies? Visit our
>> team blog at http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/default.aspx.
>>
>>
>> "Mark Norris" <> wrote in message
>> news:CBD0404F-A912-4A42-BB2B-...
>> > If I try to create a 'Complete PC Backup' or 'Create backup copies of
>> > your
>> > files and folders' in Windows Vista ( Business ), I receive an error
>> > message
>> > ...
>> >
>> > ...'Insufficient storage available to create either the shadow copy
>> > storage
>> > file or other shadow copy data (0x8004231F)'
>> >
>> > I have over 230GB of available space ( NTFS ) on my backup drive and a
>> > Complete PC Backup would only require 60GB of this. Even if I try
>> > 'Creating
>> > backup copies' and specify the backup of, for example, only 'emails' (
>> > which
>> > would only require perhaps 2 or 3 MB of space ), I still get the same
>> > error
>> > message about 'insufficient space'
>> >
>> > This is only one of many frustrating glitches I have come across with
>> > Vista
>> > ...
>> >
>> > Any helpful suggestions welcome ... or is it time I just 'up-graded
>> > to
>> > Windows XP' as many people seem to be suggesting?
>> >
>> > --
>> > Thanks
>> >
>> > Mark
>>
>>