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Chad Harris
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Malke recently wrote:
"{This has not been my experience nor that of my colleagues in doing many hundreds of restore-to-factory-condition jobs on many different brands of computers. The recovery disks work fine as long as there are no hardware issues and the correct recovery disks are used." Malke MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ Richard Urban also seemed to agree in a recent post on the same thread asking me what I meant by "recovery disc". Mr. Urban asked me the other day: "What exactly do you consider a recovery disk? Lets all get on the same page here." I'm delighted to get us "all on the same page here." There is a recovery disk (a disk image) you can make yourself by using TrueImage or some other such program. Then there are recovery disks that come with a new computer. Which are you talking about?" -- Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Desktop Experience I'd like to state to Mr. Urban emphatically that I've had Acronis for years. I've helped on their forums. Many people can't recover with the disc Acronis makes. When I'm trying to fix a Microsoft Windows Operating System, in Vista or any build of Windows 7, I prefer to use the tools that Microsoft has made rather than Acronis. I'm going to be blunt here. Microsoft pays their engineers far more than Acronis will ever dream of paying theirs and there is a damn good reason. Microsoft's engineers have considerably more education, training, imagination, and competence than Acronis' personnel, and frankly Acronis backups (the .tibs) and their Recovery Disc often results in failure. OEM Recovery Discs often result in failure and if you watch this group everyday, you'll see scores of people complaining in a short period of time that their OEM recovery disc isn't worth using it for a Frisbee. I've quoted the newest post for help on this thread as I type this to underscore my point, and also to educate people, including MVPs that Microsoft has addressed this problem with the ability to make a Startup Repair disc in the Windows Operating System when they RTM'd Vista SP1 over one year ago on April 15, 2008. They have elected to continue this utility reached from the All Programs Menu>Maintenance and ensconced in the C:\Windows\System32 folder in every service pack of Vista including the soon to be released SP2 and they are including it in the next Operating System which I have on good authority is called Windows 7 in each and every interim build until Windows 7 RTMs. I have a screenshot below: This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso that allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista SP1 and later Programs menu. Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ I'd like to once again distinguish between incompetent OEM Recovery discs and to underscore, highlight, enhance, and showcase that Microsoft, the company who makes the Windows Operating System as best I can tell (I've checked carefully on this) has responded forcefully to Malke's contention with a utility they placed in Windows Vista SP1 and every other build and version of the OS including Vista SP2 through Windows 7 Build 7106 all the way to Windows 7 RTM. hp vista 64 recovery error 1002 by deck60 on 4/12/2008 @ 9:46PM ***This is posted on this group Malke and it's typical of hundreds of posts I've answered here if not a thousand:*** "i had a problem and used the reinstall disks and it went all the way through and on disk 3 it came up with error 1002 contact hp if this problem continues if i take out the dvd and let it boot it has a boot error i think it wiped my hd clean but not sure if i try the boot on the hd using the recovery then it brings this error imedatley upon loading why cant they give you a real vista disk I have only had it a week and it seems to be dead should i take it back or what I am begining to hate vista" Psst Malke-- 1) We don't want them to "hate Vista." 2) Mr. Ballmer and Mr. Sinofsky and thousands of former Vista and current Win 7 team members don't want them to "hate Vista." 3) None of the MVPs or TAP participants wants them to "hate Vista." 4) No one who helps here regularly wants them to "hate Vista." 5) Our goal is to get Vista fixed here, as is yours. The links I've just shown you maximize the chance to do that, they don't lose peoples' settings, docs, files, folders, pics, music, movies and schoolwork. 6) These kids can't afford $1600 to have the material retrieved from their unbacked up hard drive, and neither can a lot of people out of school for years. 7) That's why Jim Allchin and the Vista team began to work on this utility to put it in SP1 before the Vista Beta was over and well before Vista RTM'd. Many of us hammered the point home it was needed, and MSFT listened. Unfortunately there are a lot of MVPs who are unaware that it even exists who keep touting OEM recovery discs. 8) Again, I drew you a picture of what I'm talking about to make it easy for you: This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso that allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista SP1 and later Programs menu. Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ What would you rather use? The exact same bits from Microsoft from their Vista DVD to repair the OS or some inferior crap from some OEM who is way too cheap to give anyone an OS DVD with their newly purchased box? I think I know the results of any poll in any demography with any age group. I know I know what Microsoft's intentions were in making this tool. I hope this answers both Malke's question and Mr. Urban's question. I'm delighted to take followups. It was my impression that a number of people who do great work helping on this group were unaware Microsoft has done this because they never have mentioned it that I can tell, including scores of MVPs. Best, CH |
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Richard Urban
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I have never - EVER - had a failure on any computer that I work on
(hundreds) using Acronis TrueImage - either creating an image or restoring an image. This is what **I** consider a recovery disk (image). I make an image of every single computer I work on prior to performing any work. If something blows up (happens occasionally) I can get the customers computer back to the way it was when he gave it to me and start again. Now, if the hard drive is physically defective (bad sectors etc.) of course the image will fail in the same identical way. As a service I make an image of a customers computer before I return it to him Yes, there is a small charge for this as I now have 8 external 1 terabyte hard drives dedicated to just these image files. I tell my customers that I will store the image for one year, after which the drive will be recycled. For an additional fee I will create the image file on CD/DVD disks. I test each set of disk by performing a destructive recovery (the only way to be certain they actually work) and then give the disks to the customer when he picks up his computer. If a former customer did not have me create the recovery CD/DVD disks, and he/she does something that damages their computer I can (for a small fee) return their computer to the way it was when I gave it back to them last year from my external disk image. Takes about 10-20 minutes. People have come back to me dozens of times for me to restore their computers. I have never run into a problem. No, I don't have a shop or store front. I work out of my home at a very leisurely pace, and can afford to spend the extra time needed to do the above. I don't know what you may be doing wrong but I trust TrueImage completely! -- Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Desktop Experience "Chad Harris" <Win7@yes_she_can.net> wrote in message news:... > Malke recently wrote: > > "{This has not been my experience nor that of my colleagues in doing many > hundreds of restore-to-factory-condition jobs on many different brands of > computers. The recovery disks work fine as long as there are no hardware > issues and the correct recovery disks are used." > > Malke > > MS-MVP > Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! > http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ > > Richard Urban also seemed to agree in a recent post on the same thread > asking me what I meant by "recovery disc". Mr. Urban asked me the other > day: > > "What exactly do you consider a recovery disk? Lets all get on the same > page > here." > > I'm delighted to get us "all on the same page here." > > There is a recovery disk (a disk image) you can make yourself by using > TrueImage or some other such program. Then there are recovery disks that > come with a new computer. Which are you talking about?" > > -- > > Richard Urban > Microsoft MVP > Windows Desktop Experience > > I'd like to state to Mr. Urban emphatically that I've had Acronis for > years. > I've helped on their forums. Many people can't recover with the disc > Acronis makes. > > When I'm trying to fix a Microsoft Windows Operating System, in Vista or > any > build of Windows 7, I prefer to use the tools that Microsoft has made > rather > than Acronis. I'm going to be blunt here. Microsoft pays their engineers > far more than Acronis will ever dream of paying theirs and there is a damn > good reason. Microsoft's engineers have considerably more education, > training, imagination, and competence than Acronis' personnel, and frankly > Acronis backups (the .tibs) and their Recovery Disc often results in > failure. > > OEM Recovery Discs often result in failure and if you watch this group > everyday, you'll see scores of people complaining in a short period of > time > that their OEM recovery disc isn't worth using it for a Frisbee. I've > quoted the newest post for help on this thread as I type this to > underscore > my point, and also to educate people, including MVPs that Microsoft has > addressed this problem with the ability to make a Startup Repair disc in > the > Windows Operating System when they RTM'd Vista SP1 over one year ago on > April 15, 2008. They have elected to continue this utility reached from > the > All Programs Menu>Maintenance and ensconced in the C:\Windows\System32 > folder in every service pack of Vista including the soon to be released > SP2 > and they are including it in the next Operating System which I have on > good > authority is called Windows 7 in each and every interim build until > Windows > 7 RTMs. > > I have a screenshot below: > > This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: > > http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 > > This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso > that > allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista > SP1 > and later Programs menu. > > Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) > http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ > > > I'd like to once again distinguish between incompetent OEM Recovery discs > and to underscore, highlight, enhance, and showcase that Microsoft, the > company who makes the Windows Operating System as best I can tell (I've > checked carefully on this) has responded forcefully to Malke's contention > with a utility they placed in Windows Vista SP1 and every other build and > version of the OS including Vista SP2 through Windows 7 Build 7106 all the > way to Windows 7 RTM. > > hp vista 64 recovery error 1002 by deck60 on 4/12/2008 @ 9:46PM > > ***This is posted on this group Malke and it's typical of hundreds of > posts > I've answered here if not a thousand:*** > > "i had a problem and used the reinstall disks and it went all the way > through and on disk 3 it came up with error 1002 contact hp if this > problem continues if i take out the dvd and let it boot it has a boot > error i think it wiped my hd clean but not sure if i try the boot on > the hd using the recovery then it brings this error imedatley upon > loading why cant they give you a real vista disk I have only had it a > week and it seems to be dead should i take it back or what I am > begining to hate vista" > > Psst Malke-- > > 1) We don't want them to "hate Vista." > 2) Mr. Ballmer and Mr. Sinofsky and thousands of former Vista and current > Win 7 team members don't want them to "hate Vista." > 3) None of the MVPs or TAP participants wants them to "hate Vista." > 4) No one who helps here regularly wants them to "hate Vista." > 5) Our goal is to get Vista fixed here, as is yours. The links I've just > shown you maximize the chance to do that, they don't lose peoples' > settings, > docs, files, folders, pics, music, movies and schoolwork. > 6) These kids can't afford $1600 to have the material retrieved from their > unbacked up hard drive, and neither can a lot of people out of school for > years. > 7) That's why Jim Allchin and the Vista team began to work on this utility > to put it in SP1 before the Vista Beta was over and well before Vista > RTM'd. > Many of us hammered the point home it was needed, and MSFT listened. > Unfortunately there are a lot of MVPs who are unaware that it even exists > who keep touting OEM recovery discs. > > 8) Again, I drew you a picture of what I'm talking about to make it easy > for > you: > > This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: > > http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 > > This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso > that > allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista > SP1 > and later Programs menu. > > Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) > http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ > > What would you rather use? The exact same bits from Microsoft from their > Vista DVD to repair the OS or some inferior crap from some OEM who is way > too cheap to give anyone an OS DVD with their newly purchased box? > > I think I know the results of any poll in any demography with any age > group. > I know I know what Microsoft's intentions were in making this tool. > > I hope this answers both Malke's question and Mr. Urban's question. I'm > delighted to take followups. It was my impression that a number of people > who do great work helping on this group were unaware Microsoft has done > this > because they never have mentioned it that I can tell, including scores of > MVPs. > > Best, > > CH > > |
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Mike Hall - MVP
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"Chad Harris" <Win7@yes_she_can.net> wrote in message
news:... > Malke recently wrote: > > "{This has not been my experience nor that of my colleagues in doing many > hundreds of restore-to-factory-condition jobs on many different brands of > computers. The recovery disks work fine as long as there are no hardware > issues and the correct recovery disks are used." > > Malke > > MS-MVP > Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! > http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ > > Richard Urban also seemed to agree in a recent post on the same thread > asking me what I meant by "recovery disc". Mr. Urban asked me the other > day: > > "What exactly do you consider a recovery disk? Lets all get on the same > page > here." > > I'm delighted to get us "all on the same page here." > > There is a recovery disk (a disk image) you can make yourself by using > TrueImage or some other such program. Then there are recovery disks that > come with a new computer. Which are you talking about?" > > -- > > Richard Urban > Microsoft MVP > Windows Desktop Experience > > I'd like to state to Mr. Urban emphatically that I've had Acronis for > years. > I've helped on their forums. Many people can't recover with the disc > Acronis makes. > > When I'm trying to fix a Microsoft Windows Operating System, in Vista or > any > build of Windows 7, I prefer to use the tools that Microsoft has made > rather > than Acronis. I'm going to be blunt here. Microsoft pays their engineers > far more than Acronis will ever dream of paying theirs and there is a damn > good reason. Microsoft's engineers have considerably more education, > training, imagination, and competence than Acronis' personnel, and frankly > Acronis backups (the .tibs) and their Recovery Disc often results in > failure. > > OEM Recovery Discs often result in failure and if you watch this group > everyday, you'll see scores of people complaining in a short period of > time > that their OEM recovery disc isn't worth using it for a Frisbee. I've > quoted the newest post for help on this thread as I type this to > underscore > my point, and also to educate people, including MVPs that Microsoft has > addressed this problem with the ability to make a Startup Repair disc in > the > Windows Operating System when they RTM'd Vista SP1 over one year ago on > April 15, 2008. They have elected to continue this utility reached from > the > All Programs Menu>Maintenance and ensconced in the C:\Windows\System32 > folder in every service pack of Vista including the soon to be released > SP2 > and they are including it in the next Operating System which I have on > good > authority is called Windows 7 in each and every interim build until > Windows > 7 RTMs. > > I have a screenshot below: > > This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: > > http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 > > This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso > that > allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista > SP1 > and later Programs menu. > > Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) > http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ > > > I'd like to once again distinguish between incompetent OEM Recovery discs > and to underscore, highlight, enhance, and showcase that Microsoft, the > company who makes the Windows Operating System as best I can tell (I've > checked carefully on this) has responded forcefully to Malke's contention > with a utility they placed in Windows Vista SP1 and every other build and > version of the OS including Vista SP2 through Windows 7 Build 7106 all the > way to Windows 7 RTM. > > hp vista 64 recovery error 1002 by deck60 on 4/12/2008 @ 9:46PM > > ***This is posted on this group Malke and it's typical of hundreds of > posts > I've answered here if not a thousand:*** > > "i had a problem and used the reinstall disks and it went all the way > through and on disk 3 it came up with error 1002 contact hp if this > problem continues if i take out the dvd and let it boot it has a boot > error i think it wiped my hd clean but not sure if i try the boot on > the hd using the recovery then it brings this error imedatley upon > loading why cant they give you a real vista disk I have only had it a > week and it seems to be dead should i take it back or what I am > begining to hate vista" > > Psst Malke-- > > 1) We don't want them to "hate Vista." > 2) Mr. Ballmer and Mr. Sinofsky and thousands of former Vista and current > Win 7 team members don't want them to "hate Vista." > 3) None of the MVPs or TAP participants wants them to "hate Vista." > 4) No one who helps here regularly wants them to "hate Vista." > 5) Our goal is to get Vista fixed here, as is yours. The links I've just > shown you maximize the chance to do that, they don't lose peoples' > settings, > docs, files, folders, pics, music, movies and schoolwork. > 6) These kids can't afford $1600 to have the material retrieved from their > unbacked up hard drive, and neither can a lot of people out of school for > years. > 7) That's why Jim Allchin and the Vista team began to work on this utility > to put it in SP1 before the Vista Beta was over and well before Vista > RTM'd. > Many of us hammered the point home it was needed, and MSFT listened. > Unfortunately there are a lot of MVPs who are unaware that it even exists > who keep touting OEM recovery discs. > > 8) Again, I drew you a picture of what I'm talking about to make it easy > for > you: > > This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: > > http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 > > This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso > that > allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista > SP1 > and later Programs menu. > > Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) > http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ > > What would you rather use? The exact same bits from Microsoft from their > Vista DVD to repair the OS or some inferior crap from some OEM who is way > too cheap to give anyone an OS DVD with their newly purchased box? > > I think I know the results of any poll in any demography with any age > group. > I know I know what Microsoft's intentions were in making this tool. > > I hope this answers both Malke's question and Mr. Urban's question. I'm > delighted to take followups. It was my impression that a number of people > who do great work helping on this group were unaware Microsoft has done > this > because they never have mentioned it that I can tell, including scores of > MVPs. > > Best, > > CH > > Chad According to info on the Internet, the recovery disk option only appeared on the Vista SP1 beta, and has not appeared on any kosher Vista since then. This would suggest that Neosmart unofficially extracted the tool, not that it is a bad thing unless of course it causes problems in later builds. -- Mike Hall - MVP Windows Experience http://msmvps.com/blogs/mikehall/ |
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Chad Harris
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Richard--
After I posted screenshots and "how tos" that might well work for them to get their Vistas back intact basically promoting tools made by Microsoft, specifically Startup Repair,(including 3 Bootrec switches from its cmd prompt, system restore from Startup Repair's menu, and the F8 Windows Advanced Options where 3 of them offer the opportunity to use System Restore. I would note that I've seen for whatever reason, System Restore may work from one of those 4 options, and not the other 3. I include recommendations from Last Known Good Configuration (LKGC) although statistically that registry snapshot is a "hail Mary pass." If they rarely have a Vista DVD, then I'd include doing a repair install or an in place upgrade as well. Most OEM pc buyers don't get the OS DVD, much less than 1% in fact. I've noticed lately after I take the time and trouble to post screenshots and detailed links with directions, often from Microsoft on how to use these Microsoft tools, some brain surgeon will pop up and brilliantly say something in one short sentence glib like (near direct quotes) without providing any substantive help because they don't know how to help: "Don't waste your time; format the box." "Don't waste your time; call HP." "Don't waste your time; use the recovery discs--they work for me" "Don't waste your time use the recovery partition." Or as Malke said hours ago and he should know better to a college student whose recovery disk failed: "That's not a Vista issue." Let's see: Microsoft thinks it's not a Vista issue to repair Vista so strongly that they went out of their way to provide the way to make a Vista Repair disc in Vista SP1 and every build of every OS and every Service Pack after Vista SP1 (as you'll see when Vista SP2 or Win 7 RTMs or as you've already seen). Boy that helps the hell out of the poster doesn't it? Let me ask you something. Given the fact that MSFT got some of their best and brightest to develop repair tools that are available from Vista even when the individual does not have a Vista DVD, do you believe MSFT thinks providing those Tools on Vista from Redmond teams is not a Vista issue? Then why the hell did the make the Windows Advanced Options Menu and Startup Repair available to everyone for free as of Vista SP1? Why did they make the Recovery Console (poorly understood by most end users) and currently gone? Why did the Win RE team post directions to install Win RE's tools on the OS on their blog back on January 12, 2007 at the link below? http://blogs.msdn.com/winre/archive/...hard-disk.aspx http://blogs.msdn.com/winre/archive/...sing-waik.aspx I think I have Exhibits "A" and "B" that Microsoft feels repairing the OS is an OS issue and they damn well put their repair tools in the OS over a year ago in April 2008 and they plan on keeping them there in the next OS because I'm looking at them. I'd put Malke's nasty comment up as the most ridiculous comment I've seen in the history of newsgroups or forums. That was simply an absurd thing to say, and it wouldn't help the OP a scintilla. I'd pose this question. What the hell kind of issue is it? Microsoft knows well that these Recovery Disks are pieces of crap. I saw a lot of Beta testers tell them over and over to do something about it. And guess what? They friggin' did. They accepted the fact that they and the OEMs weren't going to put out the money to ever give away the OS DVD, and before it the XP CD. So they put a tool in the Windows OS beginning with Vista SP1 to provide the panoply of repair tools that they offer on that DVD. All this displays is pure ignorance of the tools available/ a bad attitude, or the quintessence of both. The idea of posting in this group is to fix a broken OS (often that won't boot) or to fix a problem where someone can't it, or to fix a problem where a boot has been hidden because say the BCD or MBR has been overwritten by a subsequent boot in a dual boot/multiboot situation with different OS's on the box, some from MSFT, sometimes from MSFT and Linux. Telling the person coming here for help that it's not a Vista problem is like telling a person coming to a hospital ER bleeding profusely from the chest or abdomen that "it's not a hospital problem--go back and find your mother." As I said a while ago to Malke: Malkesoft doesn't see repairing Vista the best way as a Vista problem, but Micrososft sure as hell does and they proved it here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 I thought it was hilarious when Malke said when the Recovery Disks don't work, it's not a Vista or MSFT issue. That's absurd. If that's true then why did MSFT, realizing that the OEM recovery disks/partitions don't work, make Startup Repair available with Vista SP1? You think that was by accident? But it seems they did it so quietly (it's not mentioned in any MSKB I can find nor in the SP1 release notes nor in Vista Help articles either from the OS or on the web anywhere). I think it was because a lot of us urged MSFT during the Vista Beta to make Startup Repair available when OEM partners refused to ship a Vista OS. Note below that Dell's Media Chief promised he would ship a Vista OS DVD with every box Dell sold. They aren't doing that tonight and haven't been doing it. With all respect due to anyone this is pure ignorance to the 64th power. Why in the hell would anyone urge someone who needs help to do this, when Microsoft has busted their butts to make tools far superior with developers and PMs who know far more about lower level booting at Redmond like Jim Allchin, like Steve Sinofsky and their teams? Let me put it another way. Richard Urban loves Acronis, but in this situation I'm taking it off the table. Why do I say that Richard? A lot of these people have not backed up. Most of them if not all of them who come here for help don't have Acronis. Most of them aren't knowledgeable and experienced Windows mavens and enthusiasts who are also professionals ***like you are who fix people with TLC every day***. And as some of them say, they aren't very familiar with computer fixing. So if I say to you, Richard: Here's an HP box. Or a Sony box, or an Acer or an Asus notebook. With it came Recovery Disks, or a recovery partition. Malke seemed to imply for example that in his hands, the recovery disks always work. I'm willing to bet that I can take any box with a Vista or Windows 7 OS. I can hand you or Malke the OEM recovery discs, or an OEM recovery partition (take both of them) and I'll use MSFT's tools. Keep in mind Richard, that thanks to what MSFT Win RE teams and the Storage Team and teams from the servers did in Vista SP1, there is now the ability (free) for anyone to make a Repair Disk that has the exact same bits on it that a Vista Retail RTM has for repair. I realize the nuance in VSS in system restore that exists between some versions of Vista, but that's really another issue and not too relevant here. Do you want to choose the recovery discs/partition over Startup Repair and its options, or F8 and its options? That would seem ludicrous. But what these posters who have posted in the last 24 hours on the setup group seem to be saying is LOL "This guy giving you instructions for Startup Repair or F8 is nuts. Don't waste your time. Either use the Recovery Disks and if they don't work wipe the box or call HP." And who the hell do they get when the end users "call HP" or "MSFT" for that matter. They don't get the engineers who have degrees in computer science from high quality schools who dot MSFT campuses and abound at Redmond who work with CTO's on custom installations for enterprises and midlevel enterprises, and I know some of those. They get 5 cities in India and people from Tata, Convergys of Ohio, and other tech support puppy mills who are low waged butts in seats who also don't speak English intelligibly for the most part, and don't know jack about fixing Office or Vista or XP and soon Windows 7 or other software from MSFT. And if you want to find a subject that a softie will profess complete ignorance about, it's their phone support for end users. It's a complete "see no evil here no evil paradigm" yet they'll always say in some flowerly tone that we want the best experience possible for our customers. You betcha goshdarnit. But they aren't getting it when they phone MSFT for support and anyone with a heart that beats knows that. It's a waste of time to call them. The end user gets a much higher quality of help from the contributors here. They get Richard Urban don't they? And they get the rest of us. So you tell me: What kind of post basically says "Screw the guy who showed you how to use the tools from the Vista teams who developed Win RE and are experts at low level boot issues, storage issues, the server teams at Redmond who developed these tools"--just use the recovery partition or "take your computer into the store." I have a dose of the real world. A lot of these people are kids in college like the one who posted yesterday or in this economy they can't afford to have someone pull their school work off a hard drive. If you call some of the national services who do this their average price is $1600 bucks. These kids aren't Don Trump's kids--they don't have that kind of money. And most importantly, many of them already tried the Recovery partitions/discs and they simply couldn't cut it. But they did not know they might well be able to recover their OS with the tools MSFT made for them, and that MSFT offers a way to make a startup repair disk starting with Vista SP1. I haven't seen mention of it on these two groups, but maybe I missed it the last few months when I wasn't monitoring them. It's been available for nearly a year when Vista RTM'd SP1 in early April and then had to add some bits to make it work. And besides the fact that the OEM recovery disks/partitions don't work a high percentage of the time, what happens to all their documents, settings, pics, music, videos they want and need to get back. If they are restored to factory settings when the OEM recovery disks/partitions work, what happens to the stuff they wanted to save? It just went bye bye. The Startup Repair/aka WinRE tools and the F8 tools at the Windows Advanced Options Menu, don't lose all this work that's vital for them. If they have the Vista DVD and this is a small percentage of people who buy it on their pc, then they have the additional option of trying a repair install. It eliminates the chance that these individuals who can't afford $1600 bucks from a professional as someone LOL out of contact with reality who is an MVP recommended a couple nights ago to a college student. Acronis True Image From Richard Urban: "I have never - EVER - had a failure on any computer that I work on (hundreds) using Acronis TrueImage - either creating an image or restoring an image. This is what **I** consider a recovery disk (image). But Richard, most of the people who post here for help 1) Don't have Acronis True Image 2) Haven't backed up although we urge them to repeatedly as do many websites despite the relatively easy backup modalities in Vista 3) Have already seen recovery disks/partitions fail From what you've typed, Richard, it's evident that you'll stand behind your customers, look out for them, and do everything you can to help them backup/repair their systems. The service you offer is the quality that any customer wants to have, and they are very lucky to have your help, in what seems to be a boutique service that you run spending a lot of time and truly caring for your customers. I appreciate your recounting your experience with Acronis Richard, but thousands of threads here, and tens of thousands of people have had a much different experience. Acronis in your hands obviously seems to work very well. Acronis Official Forums http://www.wilderssecurity.com/forumdisplay.php?f=64 As I said, two of the main "common denominator" issues for these people is making a boot disc that works, and recovering from the Acronis backups that they make because the .tibs get corrupted. I've always made it a point to have every ATI version, but I've never needed them. Backup to media or a hard drive is more reliable for me, and I don't have to take the time to try to ID files and folders or to decompress them from a .tib that might be corrupted. If you google you can find infinite hits for people who can't make any of Acronis' options work. I realize Acronis has had a large number of accolades and satisfied customers, and is considered the Geek imaging option of choice for a lot of people. I'm glad it works well for you and the people who value it and its tools. I haven't felt the need though I have it and study its new features every year, to use Acronis. I haven't had an operating system on any of the 4-6 boots I normally have going that I couldn't repair go South. Much of the time, I break a conservative rule and I have multiple Beta apps on Betas. The reason for that is that I love to see what's new from MSFT or other 3rd party apps, including Office 14 now in Alpha which will be Office 2010, and Win 7. The time sequence forces me to put Betas on Betas and I upgrade from Betas as the builds progress because I like to see the new features. I know the characteristics of interim builds that won't see the light of day, but I like finding bugs and making suggestions hoping to get my input into the OS or Office. I also realize that some interim builds represent two steps forward and three steps back for specific features, but of course that's the nature of Beta. When the OS or Office RTMs, then I move to an RTM for more stability and the newest features, but soon it will have a Beta SP on it and a lot of 3rd party betas. I don't bother to make test boots, because I fell like I can get out of any problem that comes up using the tools that MSDN or MSFT has available like Startup Repair, Bootrec switches, or SubInACL. I don't think I'm grandiosely saying that my boots are indestructible, but from not knowing the Start Button from my belly button years ago, I've learned enough to make fixes fairly easy for me. Despite the fact that I have Beta on Beta for much of the time until an RTM build is available, what works for me is to backup directly to DVD (using no Backup mechanism) and to an external HD. I don't have to worry about compressions corrupting, and WYSIWYG The main point I'm trying to make here is that there seems lately to be a pandemic of "helpers" here including some MVPs who at the slightest hint of a problem booting Vista, tell the people who come for help to turn tail and wipe the box or to use either two poor choices, a recovery partition or OEM recovery discs. It frankly seems ridiculous that all the people who are doing this seem to have the thesis that Vista has no tools and the recovery OEM discs/or OEM partitions are the answer(some hidden, some not which confuse a lot of end users). This is why you have a current post on the setup group where someone's uncle wiped the recovery partiton along with his box with "killdisk" although I can't imagine why someone would read the description of the software, let alone the name and think it was some kind of Rx for repair. The uncle didn't know how to get into the notebook after losing his password, and it would have been great if he'd come here for help, but unfortunately he didn't.) You've been helping on these threads for years, and I have as well, although I got involved with some elections for months and spent my time there. There are a lot of posts where those two OEM modalities just don't work. I helped on the XP groups as you did, and on Microsoft chats and other community forums for years, and I wish I had a nickel for all the people that I helped fix who had *ALREADY TRIED* the OEM disc or partition and got nada/zip/nowhere. That's the point when they posted for help. On the chats that used to be available many of us spent literally hours helping these people use the F8 options, or my favorite during my time on the XP groups and chats, an XP Repair Install (often called an Inplace Upgrade--in fact there are MSKBs with both names in the title and they do the same thing the same way). MVPs Doug Knox and Kelly Theriott often referenced this; it was my first choice for a repair when people had the XP CD (and most of them of course did not). http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/u...ps/doug92.mspx http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...erts/knox.mspx Doug Knox: How Do I do a Repair Install http://www.dougknox.com/xp/tips/xp_repair_install.htm How to perform an in-place upgrade (reinstallation) of Windows http://support.microsoft.com/kb/315341 In my hands fixing XP no boots or systemic problems for these people, and people live, the best efficacy was for ***an XP repair install/inplace upgrade***, but they needed to get their hands on an XP DVD. And to reference Acronis, when they came for help, they hadn't used it and hadn't backed up. XP's backup left much to be desired but that's been discussed and for another time. 300 + MSFT OEM named partners weren't about to help them get one, so they were on their own to buy one. I have documentation from Dell (Dell's Lionel Manchaca, Digital Media Manager for Dell @ Roundrock--15 year Dell Employee, that promised when Vista was about to RTM 1/30/07 that they were going to give each person who bought a Dell a genuine Microsoft Vista DVD, but friends of mine who have recently bought Dell haven't gotten them so I don't know what's up there. With spare time, I'll tweet him or call him and find out what happened to break his promise. Lionel Manchaca's Broken Promise http://direct2dell.org/one2one/archi...0/17/3132.aspx Ask Lionel Manchaca why he broke the promise above http://twitter.com/LionelatDell Lionel Manchaca wrote at this link: http://direct2dell.org/one2one/archi...0/17/3132.aspx Other users have expressed concern about not having the operating system reinstallation CD when they need it. When ordering a new machine, all consumers and corporate customers can opt for the Windows CD for around $10. Additionally, since July 2004, most new PCs (Dell gaming systems all ship with the OS CD)come pre-loaded with a disk partition that contains PC Restore, an applcation that allows users to reinstall system software quickly. See these instructions for how to use PC Restore to reinstall the operating system and Dell factory-installed applications in about 10 minutes. Manchaca then crossed this out and wrote what's below: "Update: Thanks to Direct2Dell reader Steven and a couple of Dell employees for pointing out a mistake I made in my original post. When I wrote this, the OS media was listed as an option in the configuration for $0. I mis-read the number, and for that mistake, I apologize. Also, though this been in the works for some time before now, it's now official. For U.S. consumer and small business customers, all systems will now ship with an operating system disc. This change will take effect in Europe by later next month. In Asia, things are unchanged-we've always shipped OS discs with systems there." MSFT's OEM VP has historically concurred in this policy through the reign of now departed Scott DiValerio who incidentally refused all calls to discuss the issue. I saw DiValerio's employee get booed at a System Builders meeting by System Builders over this very issue. A group of System Builders wanted to know why they were required to provide the actual Microsoft XP or Vista DVD to customers, and the 300+ OEM partners were not. The sassy glib answer was that when they sold 50,000 boxes, the same exemptions would be extended to them. I can document this meeting, I remember it as if it were 2 minutes ago. The rest of his answers to questions were frankly pathetic, and not anywhere on a par with the hundreds of MSFT presenters I've had the pleasure to watch. The boos he received were richly deserved, and had the guy been reporting to me in any venue and any profession, I'd have fired him on the spot both for his arrogant answer to MSFT Partners who were also customers, and his simple reprehensible lack of knowledge of hdw and software unusual for a MSFT presenter. I thought he was a poor representative of MSFT considering the high quality of hires for all their teams and many people a lot of us know at Redmond and other MSFT campuses. Best, CH "Richard Urban" <> wrote in message news:#4#... > I have never - EVER - had a failure on any computer that I work on > (hundreds) using Acronis TrueImage - either creating an image or restoring > an image. This is what **I** consider a recovery disk (image). > > I make an image of every single computer I work on prior to performing any > work. If something blows up (happens occasionally) I can get the customers > computer back to the way it was when he gave it to me and start again. > Now, if the hard drive is physically defective (bad sectors etc.) of > course the image will fail in the same identical way. > > As a service I make an image of a customers computer before I return it to > him Yes, there is a small charge for this as I now have 8 external 1 > terabyte hard drives dedicated to just these image files. I tell my > customers that I will store the image for one year, after which the drive > will be recycled. > > For an additional fee I will create the image file on CD/DVD disks. I test > each set of disk by performing a destructive recovery (the only way to be > certain they actually work) and then give the disks to the customer when > he picks up his computer. > > If a former customer did not have me create the recovery CD/DVD disks, and > he/she does something that damages their computer I can (for a small fee) > return their computer to the way it was when I gave it back to them last > year from my external disk image. Takes about 10-20 minutes. > > People have come back to me dozens of times for me to restore their > computers. I have never run into a problem. > > No, I don't have a shop or store front. I work out of my home at a very > leisurely pace, and can afford to spend the extra time needed to do the > above. > > I don't know what you may be doing wrong but I trust TrueImage completely! > > -- > > Richard Urban > Microsoft MVP > Windows Desktop Experience > > > > "Chad Harris" <Win7@yes_she_can.net> wrote in message > news:... >> Malke recently wrote: >> >> "{This has not been my experience nor that of my colleagues in doing many >> hundreds of restore-to-factory-condition jobs on many different brands of >> computers. The recovery disks work fine as long as there are no hardware >> issues and the correct recovery disks are used." >> >> Malke >> >> MS-MVP >> Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! >> http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ >> >> Richard Urban also seemed to agree in a recent post on the same thread >> asking me what I meant by "recovery disc". Mr. Urban asked me the other >> day: >> >> "What exactly do you consider a recovery disk? Lets all get on the same >> page >> here." >> >> I'm delighted to get us "all on the same page here." >> >> There is a recovery disk (a disk image) you can make yourself by using >> TrueImage or some other such program. Then there are recovery disks that >> come with a new computer. Which are you talking about?" >> >> -- >> >> Richard Urban >> Microsoft MVP >> Windows Desktop Experience >> >> I'd like to state to Mr. Urban emphatically that I've had Acronis for >> years. >> I've helped on their forums. Many people can't recover with the disc >> Acronis makes. >> >> When I'm trying to fix a Microsoft Windows Operating System, in Vista or >> any >> build of Windows 7, I prefer to use the tools that Microsoft has made >> rather >> than Acronis. I'm going to be blunt here. Microsoft pays their >> engineers >> far more than Acronis will ever dream of paying theirs and there is a >> damn >> good reason. Microsoft's engineers have considerably more education, >> training, imagination, and competence than Acronis' personnel, and >> frankly >> Acronis backups (the .tibs) and their Recovery Disc often results in >> failure. >> >> OEM Recovery Discs often result in failure and if you watch this group >> everyday, you'll see scores of people complaining in a short period of >> time >> that their OEM recovery disc isn't worth using it for a Frisbee. I've >> quoted the newest post for help on this thread as I type this to >> underscore >> my point, and also to educate people, including MVPs that Microsoft has >> addressed this problem with the ability to make a Startup Repair disc in >> the >> Windows Operating System when they RTM'd Vista SP1 over one year ago on >> April 15, 2008. They have elected to continue this utility reached from >> the >> All Programs Menu>Maintenance and ensconced in the C:\Windows\System32 >> folder in every service pack of Vista including the soon to be released >> SP2 >> and they are including it in the next Operating System which I have on >> good >> authority is called Windows 7 in each and every interim build until >> Windows >> 7 RTMs. >> >> I have a screenshot below: >> >> This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: >> >> http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 >> >> This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso >> that >> allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista >> SP1 >> and later Programs menu. >> >> Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) >> http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ >> >> >> I'd like to once again distinguish between incompetent OEM Recovery discs >> and to underscore, highlight, enhance, and showcase that Microsoft, the >> company who makes the Windows Operating System as best I can tell (I've >> checked carefully on this) has responded forcefully to Malke's contention >> with a utility they placed in Windows Vista SP1 and every other build and >> version of the OS including Vista SP2 through Windows 7 Build 7106 all >> the >> way to Windows 7 RTM. >> >> hp vista 64 recovery error 1002 by deck60 on 4/12/2008 @ 9:46PM >> >> ***This is posted on this group Malke and it's typical of hundreds of >> posts >> I've answered here if not a thousand:*** >> >> "i had a problem and used the reinstall disks and it went all the way >> through and on disk 3 it came up with error 1002 contact hp if this >> problem continues if i take out the dvd and let it boot it has a boot >> error i think it wiped my hd clean but not sure if i try the boot on >> the hd using the recovery then it brings this error imedatley upon >> loading why cant they give you a real vista disk I have only had it a >> week and it seems to be dead should i take it back or what I am >> begining to hate vista" >> >> Psst Malke-- >> >> 1) We don't want them to "hate Vista." >> 2) Mr. Ballmer and Mr. Sinofsky and thousands of former Vista and current >> Win 7 team members don't want them to "hate Vista." >> 3) None of the MVPs or TAP participants wants them to "hate Vista." >> 4) No one who helps here regularly wants them to "hate Vista." >> 5) Our goal is to get Vista fixed here, as is yours. The links I've just >> shown you maximize the chance to do that, they don't lose peoples' >> settings, >> docs, files, folders, pics, music, movies and schoolwork. >> 6) These kids can't afford $1600 to have the material retrieved from >> their >> unbacked up hard drive, and neither can a lot of people out of school for >> years. >> 7) That's why Jim Allchin and the Vista team began to work on this >> utility >> to put it in SP1 before the Vista Beta was over and well before Vista >> RTM'd. >> Many of us hammered the point home it was needed, and MSFT listened. >> Unfortunately there are a lot of MVPs who are unaware that it even exists >> who keep touting OEM recovery discs. >> >> 8) Again, I drew you a picture of what I'm talking about to make it easy >> for >> you: >> >> This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: >> >> http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 >> >> This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso >> that >> allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista >> SP1 >> and later Programs menu. >> >> Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) >> http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ >> >> What would you rather use? The exact same bits from Microsoft from their >> Vista DVD to repair the OS or some inferior crap from some OEM who is way >> too cheap to give anyone an OS DVD with their newly purchased box? >> >> I think I know the results of any poll in any demography with any age >> group. >> I know I know what Microsoft's intentions were in making this tool. >> >> I hope this answers both Malke's question and Mr. Urban's question. I'm >> delighted to take followups. It was my impression that a number of >> people >> who do great work helping on this group were unaware Microsoft has done >> this >> because they never have mentioned it that I can tell, including scores of >> MVPs. >> >> Best, >> >> CH >> >> |
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"Chad Harris" <Win7@yes_she_can.net> wrote in message
news:... > Richard-- > > After I posted screenshots and "how tos" that might well work for them to > get their Vistas back intact basically promoting tools made by Microsoft, > specifically Startup Repair,(including 3 Bootrec switches from its cmd > prompt, system restore from Startup Repair's menu, and the F8 Windows > Advanced Options where 3 of them offer the opportunity to use System > Restore. I would note that I've seen for whatever reason, System Restore > may work from one of those 4 options, and not the other 3. I include > recommendations from Last Known Good Configuration (LKGC) although > statistically that registry snapshot is a "hail Mary pass." If they > rarely have a Vista DVD, then I'd include doing a repair install or an in > place upgrade as well. Most OEM pc buyers don't get the OS DVD, much less > than 1% in fact. > > I've noticed lately after I take the time and trouble to post screenshots > and detailed links with directions, often from Microsoft on how to use > these Microsoft tools, some brain surgeon will pop up and brilliantly say > something in one short sentence glib like (near direct quotes) without > providing any substantive help because they don't know how to help: > > "Don't waste your time; format the box." > > "Don't waste your time; call HP." > > "Don't waste your time; use the recovery discs--they work for me" > > "Don't waste your time use the recovery partition." > > Or as Malke said hours ago and he should know better to a college student > whose recovery disk failed: > > "That's not a Vista issue." > > Let's see: Microsoft thinks it's not a Vista issue to repair Vista so > strongly that they went out of their way to provide the way to make a > Vista Repair disc in Vista SP1 and every build of every OS and every > Service Pack after Vista SP1 (as you'll see when Vista SP2 or Win 7 RTMs > or as you've already seen). > > Boy that helps the hell out of the poster doesn't it? Let me ask you > something. Given the fact that MSFT got some of their best and brightest > to develop repair tools that are available from Vista even when the > individual does not have a Vista DVD, do you believe MSFT thinks providing > those Tools on Vista from Redmond teams is not a Vista issue? > > Then why the hell did the make the Windows Advanced Options Menu and > Startup Repair available to everyone for free as of Vista SP1? > > Why did they make the Recovery Console (poorly understood by most end > users) and currently gone? > > Why did the Win RE team post directions to install Win RE's tools on the > OS on their blog back on January 12, 2007 at the link below? > > http://blogs.msdn.com/winre/archive/...hard-disk.aspx > > http://blogs.msdn.com/winre/archive/...sing-waik.aspx > > I think I have Exhibits "A" and "B" that Microsoft feels repairing the OS > is an OS issue and they damn well put their repair tools in the OS over a > year ago in April 2008 and they plan on keeping them there in the next OS > because I'm looking at them. > > I'd put Malke's nasty comment up as the most ridiculous comment I've seen > in the history of newsgroups or forums. That was simply an absurd thing > to say, and it wouldn't help the OP a scintilla. > > I'd pose this question. What the hell kind of issue is it? Microsoft > knows well that these Recovery Disks are pieces of crap. I saw a lot of > Beta testers tell them over and over to do something about it. And guess > what? They friggin' did. > > They accepted the fact that they and the OEMs weren't going to put out the > money to ever give away the OS DVD, and before it the XP CD. So they put > a tool in the Windows OS beginning with Vista SP1 to provide the panoply > of repair tools that they offer on that DVD. > > All this displays is pure ignorance of the tools available/ a bad > attitude, or the quintessence of both. > > The idea of posting in this group is to fix a broken OS (often that won't > boot) or to fix a problem where someone can't it, or to fix a problem > where a boot has been hidden because say the BCD or MBR has been > overwritten by a subsequent boot in a dual boot/multiboot situation with > different OS's on the box, some from MSFT, sometimes from MSFT and Linux. > > Telling the person coming here for help that it's not a Vista problem is > like telling a person coming to a hospital ER bleeding profusely from the > chest or abdomen that "it's not a hospital problem--go back and find your > mother." > > As I said a while ago to Malke: > > Malkesoft doesn't see repairing Vista the best way as a Vista problem, but > Micrososft sure as hell does and they proved it here: > > http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 > > I thought it was hilarious when Malke said when the Recovery Disks don't > work, it's not a Vista or MSFT issue. That's absurd. If that's true then > why did MSFT, realizing that the OEM recovery disks/partitions don't work, > make Startup Repair available with Vista SP1? You think that was by > accident? But it seems they did it so quietly (it's not mentioned in any > MSKB I can find nor in the SP1 release notes nor in Vista Help articles > either from the OS or on the web anywhere). > > I think it was because a lot of us urged MSFT during the Vista Beta to > make Startup Repair available when OEM partners refused to ship a Vista > OS. Note below that Dell's Media Chief promised he would ship a Vista OS > DVD with every box Dell sold. They aren't doing that tonight and haven't > been doing it. > > With all respect due to anyone this is pure ignorance to the 64th power. > Why in the hell would anyone urge someone who needs help to do this, when > Microsoft has busted their butts to make tools far superior with > developers and PMs who know far more about lower level booting at Redmond > like Jim Allchin, like Steve Sinofsky and their teams? > > Let me put it another way. Richard Urban loves Acronis, but in this > situation I'm taking it off the table. Why do I say that Richard? A lot > of these people have not backed up. Most of them if not all of them who > come here for help don't have Acronis. Most of them aren't knowledgeable > and experienced Windows mavens and enthusiasts who are also professionals > ***like you are who fix people with TLC every day***. And as some of > them say, they aren't very familiar with computer fixing. So if I say to > you, Richard: > > Here's an HP box. Or a Sony box, or an Acer or an Asus notebook. With it > came Recovery Disks, or a recovery partition. Malke seemed to imply for > example that in his hands, the recovery disks always work. I'm willing to > bet that I can take any box with a Vista or Windows 7 OS. I can hand you > or Malke the OEM recovery discs, or an OEM recovery partition (take both > of them) and I'll use MSFT's tools. > > Keep in mind Richard, that thanks to what MSFT Win RE teams and the > Storage Team and teams from the servers did in Vista SP1, there is now the > ability (free) for anyone to make a Repair Disk that has the exact same > bits on it that a Vista Retail RTM has for repair. I realize the nuance > in VSS in system restore that exists between some versions of Vista, but > that's really another issue and not too relevant here. > > Do you want to choose the recovery discs/partition over Startup Repair and > its options, or F8 and its options? That would seem ludicrous. > > But what these posters who have posted in the last 24 hours on the setup > group seem to be saying is LOL > > "This guy giving you instructions for Startup Repair or F8 is nuts. Don't > waste your time. Either use the Recovery Disks and if they don't work > wipe the box or call HP." > > And who the hell do they get when the end users "call HP" or "MSFT" for > that matter. They don't get the engineers who have degrees in computer > science from high quality schools who dot MSFT campuses and abound at > Redmond who work with CTO's on custom installations for enterprises and > midlevel enterprises, and I know some of those. > > They get 5 cities in India and people from Tata, Convergys of Ohio, and > other tech support puppy mills who are low waged butts in seats who also > don't speak English intelligibly for the most part, and don't know jack > about fixing Office or Vista or XP and soon Windows 7 or other software > from MSFT. And if you want to find a subject that a softie will profess > complete ignorance about, it's their phone support for end users. It's a > complete "see no evil here no evil paradigm" yet they'll always say in > some flowerly tone that we want the best experience possible for our > customers. You betcha goshdarnit. But they aren't getting it when they > phone MSFT for support and anyone with a heart that beats knows that. > > It's a waste of time to call them. The end user gets a much higher > quality of help from the contributors here. They get Richard Urban don't > they? And they get the rest of us. So you tell me: > > What kind of post basically says "Screw the guy who showed you how to use > the tools from the Vista teams who developed Win RE and are experts at low > level boot issues, storage issues, the server teams at Redmond who > developed these tools"--just use the recovery partition or "take your > computer into the store." > > I have a dose of the real world. A lot of these people are kids in > college like the one who posted yesterday or in this economy they can't > afford to have someone pull their school work off a hard drive. If you > call some of the national services who do this their average price is > $1600 bucks. These kids aren't Don Trump's kids--they don't have that > kind of money. > > And most importantly, many of them already tried the Recovery > partitions/discs and they simply couldn't cut it. > > But they did not know they might well be able to recover their OS with the > tools MSFT made for them, and that MSFT offers a way to make a startup > repair disk starting with Vista SP1. I haven't seen mention of it on > these two groups, but maybe I missed it the last few months when I wasn't > monitoring them. It's been available for nearly a year when Vista RTM'd > SP1 in early April and then had to add some bits to make it work. > > And besides the fact that the OEM recovery disks/partitions don't work a > high percentage of the time, what happens to all their documents, > settings, pics, music, videos they want and need to get back. If they are > restored to factory settings when the OEM recovery disks/partitions work, > what happens to the stuff they wanted to save? It just went bye bye. > > The Startup Repair/aka WinRE tools and the F8 tools at the Windows > Advanced Options Menu, don't lose all this work that's vital for them. > If they have the Vista DVD and this is a small percentage of people who > buy it on their pc, then they have the additional option of trying a > repair install. It eliminates the chance that these individuals who can't > afford $1600 bucks from a professional as someone LOL out of contact with > reality who is an MVP recommended a couple nights ago to a college > student. > > Acronis True Image > > From Richard Urban: > > "I have never - EVER - had a failure on any computer that I work on > (hundreds) using Acronis TrueImage - either creating an image or restoring > an image. This is what **I** consider a recovery disk (image). > > But Richard, most of the people who post here for help > > 1) Don't have Acronis True Image > 2) Haven't backed up although we urge them to repeatedly as do many > websites despite the relatively easy backup modalities in Vista > 3) Have already seen recovery disks/partitions fail > > From what you've typed, Richard, it's evident that you'll stand behind > your customers, look out for them, and do everything you can to help them > backup/repair their systems. The service you offer is the quality that > any customer wants to have, and they are very lucky to have your help, in > what seems to be a boutique service that you run spending a lot of time > and truly caring for your customers. > > I appreciate your recounting your experience with Acronis Richard, but > thousands of threads here, and tens of thousands of people have had a much > different experience. Acronis in your hands obviously seems to work very > well. > > Acronis Official Forums > > http://www.wilderssecurity.com/forumdisplay.php?f=64 > > As I said, two of the main "common denominator" issues for these people is > making a boot disc that works, and recovering from the Acronis backups > that they make because the .tibs get corrupted. > > I've always made it a point to have every ATI version, but I've never > needed them. Backup to media or a hard drive is more reliable for me, and > I don't have to take the time to try to ID files and folders or to > decompress them from a .tib that might be corrupted. > > If you google you can find infinite hits for people who can't make any of > Acronis' options work. > > I realize Acronis has had a large number of accolades and satisfied > customers, and is considered the Geek imaging option of choice for a lot > of people. I'm glad it works well for you and the people who value it and > its tools. > > I haven't felt the need though I have it and study its new features every > year, to use Acronis. I haven't had an operating system on any of the 4-6 > boots I normally have going that I couldn't repair go South. Much of the > time, I break a conservative rule and I have multiple Beta apps on Betas. > The reason for that is that I love to see what's new from MSFT or other > 3rd party apps, including Office 14 now in Alpha which will be Office > 2010, and Win 7. The time sequence forces me to put Betas on Betas and I > upgrade from Betas as the builds progress because I like to see the new > features. I know the characteristics of interim builds that won't see the > light of day, but I like finding bugs and making suggestions hoping to get > my input into the OS or Office. I also realize that some interim builds > represent two steps forward and three steps back for specific features, > but of course that's the nature of Beta. > > When the OS or Office RTMs, then I move to an RTM for more stability and > the newest features, but soon it will have a Beta SP on it and a lot of > 3rd party betas. I don't bother to make test boots, because I fell like I > can get out of any problem that comes up using the tools that MSDN or MSFT > has available like Startup Repair, Bootrec switches, or SubInACL. I don't > think I'm grandiosely saying that my boots are indestructible, but from > not knowing the Start Button from my belly button years ago, I've learned > enough to make fixes fairly easy for me. > > Despite the fact that I have Beta on Beta for much of the time until an > RTM build is available, what works for me is to backup directly to DVD > (using no Backup mechanism) and to an external HD. I don't have to worry > about compressions corrupting, and WYSIWYG > > The main point I'm trying to make here is that there seems lately to be a > pandemic of "helpers" here including some MVPs who at the slightest hint > of a problem booting Vista, tell the people who come for help to turn tail > and wipe the box or to use either two poor choices, a recovery partition > or OEM recovery discs. > > It frankly seems ridiculous that all the people who are doing this seem to > have the thesis that Vista has no tools and the recovery OEM discs/or OEM > partitions are the answer(some hidden, some not which confuse a lot of end > users). This is why you have a current post on the setup group where > someone's uncle wiped the recovery partiton along with his box with > "killdisk" although I can't imagine why someone would read the description > of the software, let alone the name and think it was some kind of Rx for > repair. The uncle didn't know how to get into the notebook after losing > his password, and it would have been great if he'd come here for help, but > unfortunately he didn't.) > > You've been helping on these threads for years, and I have as well, > although I got involved with some elections for months and spent my time > there. There are a lot of posts where those two OEM modalities just don't > work. I helped on the XP groups as you did, and on Microsoft chats and > other community forums for years, and I wish I had a nickel for all the > people that I helped fix who had *ALREADY TRIED* the OEM disc or partition > and got nada/zip/nowhere. That's the point when they posted for help. On > the chats that used to be available many of us spent literally hours > helping these people use the F8 options, or my favorite during my time on > the XP groups and chats, an XP Repair Install (often called an Inplace > Upgrade--in fact there are MSKBs with both names in the title and they do > the same thing the same way). MVPs Doug Knox and Kelly Theriott often > referenced this; it was my first choice for a repair when people had the > XP CD (and most of them of course did not). > > http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/u...ps/doug92.mspx > > http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...erts/knox.mspx > > Doug Knox: How Do I do a Repair Install > http://www.dougknox.com/xp/tips/xp_repair_install.htm > > How to perform an in-place upgrade (reinstallation) of Windows > http://support.microsoft.com/kb/315341 > > In my hands fixing XP no boots or systemic problems for these people, and > people live, the best efficacy was for ***an XP repair install/inplace > upgrade***, but they needed to get their hands on an XP DVD. And to > reference Acronis, when they came for help, they hadn't used it and hadn't > backed up. XP's backup left much to be desired but that's been discussed > and for another time. > > 300 + MSFT OEM named partners weren't about to help them get one, so they > were on their own to buy one. > > I have documentation from Dell (Dell's Lionel Manchaca, Digital Media > Manager for Dell @ Roundrock--15 year Dell Employee, that promised when > Vista was about to RTM 1/30/07 that they were going to give each person > who bought a Dell a genuine Microsoft Vista DVD, but friends of mine who > have recently bought Dell haven't gotten them so I don't know what's up > there. With spare time, I'll tweet him or call him and find out what > happened to break his promise. > > Lionel Manchaca's Broken Promise > http://direct2dell.org/one2one/archi...0/17/3132.aspx > > Ask Lionel Manchaca why he broke the promise above > http://twitter.com/LionelatDell > > Lionel Manchaca wrote at this link: > http://direct2dell.org/one2one/archi...0/17/3132.aspx > > > Other users have expressed concern about not having the operating system > reinstallation CD when they need it. When ordering a new machine, all > consumers and corporate customers can opt for the Windows CD for around > $10. Additionally, since July 2004, most new PCs (Dell gaming systems all > ship with the OS CD)come pre-loaded with a disk partition that contains PC > Restore, an applcation that allows users to reinstall system software > quickly. See these instructions for how to use PC Restore to reinstall the > operating system and Dell factory-installed applications in about 10 > minutes. > > Manchaca then crossed this out and wrote what's below: > > "Update: Thanks to Direct2Dell reader Steven and a couple of Dell > employees for pointing out a mistake I made in my original post. When I > wrote this, the OS media was listed as an option in the configuration for > $0. I mis-read the number, and for that mistake, I apologize. Also, > though this been in the works for some time before now, it's now official. > For U.S. consumer and small business customers, all systems will now ship > with an operating system disc. This change will take effect in Europe by > later next month. In Asia, things are unchanged-we've always shipped OS > discs with systems there." > > MSFT's OEM VP has historically concurred in this policy through the reign > of now departed Scott DiValerio who incidentally refused all calls to > discuss the issue. I saw DiValerio's employee get booed at a System > Builders meeting by System Builders over this very issue. A group of > System Builders wanted to know why they were required to provide the > actual Microsoft XP or Vista DVD to customers, and the 300+ OEM partners > were not. > > The sassy glib answer was that when they sold 50,000 boxes, the same > exemptions would be extended to them. I can document this meeting, I > remember it as if it were 2 minutes ago. The rest of his answers to > questions were frankly pathetic, and not anywhere on a par with the > hundreds of MSFT presenters I've had the pleasure to watch. > > The boos he received were richly deserved, and had the guy been reporting > to me in any venue and any profession, I'd have fired him on the spot both > for his arrogant answer to MSFT Partners who were also customers, and his > simple reprehensible lack of knowledge of hdw and software unusual for a > MSFT presenter. I thought he was a poor representative of MSFT > considering the high quality of hires for all their teams and many people > a lot of us know at Redmond and other MSFT campuses. > > Best, > > CH > > > > > > "Richard Urban" <> wrote in message > news:#4#... >> I have never - EVER - had a failure on any computer that I work on >> (hundreds) using Acronis TrueImage - either creating an image or >> restoring an image. This is what **I** consider a recovery disk (image). >> >> I make an image of every single computer I work on prior to performing >> any work. If something blows up (happens occasionally) I can get the >> customers computer back to the way it was when he gave it to me and start >> again. Now, if the hard drive is physically defective (bad sectors etc.) >> of course the image will fail in the same identical way. >> >> As a service I make an image of a customers computer before I return it >> to him Yes, there is a small charge for this as I now have 8 external 1 >> terabyte hard drives dedicated to just these image files. I tell my >> customers that I will store the image for one year, after which the drive >> will be recycled. >> >> For an additional fee I will create the image file on CD/DVD disks. I >> test each set of disk by performing a destructive recovery (the only way >> to be certain they actually work) and then give the disks to the customer >> when he picks up his computer. >> >> If a former customer did not have me create the recovery CD/DVD disks, >> and he/she does something that damages their computer I can (for a small >> fee) return their computer to the way it was when I gave it back to them >> last year from my external disk image. Takes about 10-20 minutes. >> >> People have come back to me dozens of times for me to restore their >> computers. I have never run into a problem. >> >> No, I don't have a shop or store front. I work out of my home at a very >> leisurely pace, and can afford to spend the extra time needed to do the >> above. >> >> I don't know what you may be doing wrong but I trust TrueImage >> completely! >> >> -- >> >> Richard Urban >> Microsoft MVP >> Windows Desktop Experience >> >> >> >> "Chad Harris" <Win7@yes_she_can.net> wrote in message >> news:... >>> Malke recently wrote: >>> >>> "{This has not been my experience nor that of my colleagues in doing >>> many >>> hundreds of restore-to-factory-condition jobs on many different brands >>> of >>> computers. The recovery disks work fine as long as there are no hardware >>> issues and the correct recovery disks are used." >>> >>> Malke >>> >>> MS-MVP >>> Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! >>> http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ >>> >>> Richard Urban also seemed to agree in a recent post on the same thread >>> asking me what I meant by "recovery disc". Mr. Urban asked me the other >>> day: >>> >>> "What exactly do you consider a recovery disk? Lets all get on the same >>> page >>> here." >>> >>> I'm delighted to get us "all on the same page here." >>> >>> There is a recovery disk (a disk image) you can make yourself by using >>> TrueImage or some other such program. Then there are recovery disks that >>> come with a new computer. Which are you talking about?" >>> >>> -- >>> >>> Richard Urban >>> Microsoft MVP >>> Windows Desktop Experience >>> >>> I'd like to state to Mr. Urban emphatically that I've had Acronis for >>> years. >>> I've helped on their forums. Many people can't recover with the disc >>> Acronis makes. >>> >>> When I'm trying to fix a Microsoft Windows Operating System, in Vista or >>> any >>> build of Windows 7, I prefer to use the tools that Microsoft has made >>> rather >>> than Acronis. I'm going to be blunt here. Microsoft pays their >>> engineers >>> far more than Acronis will ever dream of paying theirs and there is a >>> damn >>> good reason. Microsoft's engineers have considerably more education, >>> training, imagination, and competence than Acronis' personnel, and >>> frankly >>> Acronis backups (the .tibs) and their Recovery Disc often results in >>> failure. >>> >>> OEM Recovery Discs often result in failure and if you watch this group >>> everyday, you'll see scores of people complaining in a short period of >>> time >>> that their OEM recovery disc isn't worth using it for a Frisbee. I've >>> quoted the newest post for help on this thread as I type this to >>> underscore >>> my point, and also to educate people, including MVPs that Microsoft has >>> addressed this problem with the ability to make a Startup Repair disc in >>> the >>> Windows Operating System when they RTM'd Vista SP1 over one year ago on >>> April 15, 2008. They have elected to continue this utility reached from >>> the >>> All Programs Menu>Maintenance and ensconced in the C:\Windows\System32 >>> folder in every service pack of Vista including the soon to be released >>> SP2 >>> and they are including it in the next Operating System which I have on >>> good >>> authority is called Windows 7 in each and every interim build until >>> Windows >>> 7 RTMs. >>> >>> I have a screenshot below: >>> >>> This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: >>> >>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 >>> >>> This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso >>> that >>> allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista >>> SP1 >>> and later Programs menu. >>> >>> Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) >>> http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ >>> >>> >>> I'd like to once again distinguish between incompetent OEM Recovery >>> discs >>> and to underscore, highlight, enhance, and showcase that Microsoft, the >>> company who makes the Windows Operating System as best I can tell (I've >>> checked carefully on this) has responded forcefully to Malke's >>> contention >>> with a utility they placed in Windows Vista SP1 and every other build >>> and >>> version of the OS including Vista SP2 through Windows 7 Build 7106 all >>> the >>> way to Windows 7 RTM. >>> >>> hp vista 64 recovery error 1002 by deck60 on 4/12/2008 @ 9:46PM >>> >>> ***This is posted on this group Malke and it's typical of hundreds of >>> posts >>> I've answered here if not a thousand:*** >>> >>> "i had a problem and used the reinstall disks and it went all the way >>> through and on disk 3 it came up with error 1002 contact hp if this >>> problem continues if i take out the dvd and let it boot it has a boot >>> error i think it wiped my hd clean but not sure if i try the boot on >>> the hd using the recovery then it brings this error imedatley upon >>> loading why cant they give you a real vista disk I have only had it a >>> week and it seems to be dead should i take it back or what I am >>> begining to hate vista" >>> >>> Psst Malke-- >>> >>> 1) We don't want them to "hate Vista." >>> 2) Mr. Ballmer and Mr. Sinofsky and thousands of former Vista and >>> current >>> Win 7 team members don't want them to "hate Vista." >>> 3) None of the MVPs or TAP participants wants them to "hate Vista." >>> 4) No one who helps here regularly wants them to "hate Vista." >>> 5) Our goal is to get Vista fixed here, as is yours. The links I've >>> just >>> shown you maximize the chance to do that, they don't lose peoples' >>> settings, >>> docs, files, folders, pics, music, movies and schoolwork. >>> 6) These kids can't afford $1600 to have the material retrieved from >>> their >>> unbacked up hard drive, and neither can a lot of people out of school >>> for >>> years. >>> 7) That's why Jim Allchin and the Vista team began to work on this >>> utility >>> to put it in SP1 before the Vista Beta was over and well before Vista >>> RTM'd. >>> Many of us hammered the point home it was needed, and MSFT listened. >>> Unfortunately there are a lot of MVPs who are unaware that it even >>> exists >>> who keep touting OEM recovery discs. >>> >>> 8) Again, I drew you a picture of what I'm talking about to make it easy >>> for >>> you: >>> >>> This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: >>> >>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 >>> >>> This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso >>> that >>> allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista >>> SP1 >>> and later Programs menu. >>> >>> Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) >>> http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ >>> >>> What would you rather use? The exact same bits from Microsoft from >>> their >>> Vista DVD to repair the OS or some inferior crap from some OEM who is >>> way >>> too cheap to give anyone an OS DVD with their newly purchased box? >>> >>> I think I know the results of any poll in any demography with any age >>> group. >>> I know I know what Microsoft's intentions were in making this tool. >>> >>> I hope this answers both Malke's question and Mr. Urban's question. I'm >>> delighted to take followups. It was my impression that a number of >>> people >>> who do great work helping on this group were unaware Microsoft has done >>> this >>> because they never have mentioned it that I can tell, including scores >>> of >>> MVPs. >>> >>> Best, >>> >>> CH >>> >>> A failing recovery disk is not a Vista issue.. it is a bad DVD or failing optical drive.. -- Mike Hall - MVP Windows Experience http://msmvps.com/blogs/mikehall/ |
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Chad Harris
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Hi Mike--
I have honestly installed so many builds on my four main boots since Vista upgrading them frequently when there is a Win 7 build that I would have to install Vista on a partition to see. But if you say that it's not there, then it's not there. Please take a quick look at this thread on a technet group from last year. I know it started asking where this tool was, but then note what C4 Consulting says: http://social.technet.microsoft.com/...-b9c3df52860e/ "Just in case anybody is still trying to get this program to work it is possible. you need to grab recdisc.exe from the SP1 RTM version recdisc.exe. Then open up the c:/windows/system32 folder. right click on the recdisc.exe file and change the security settings. (right click on the file then) Select the "Security" tab and click "Advanced". Select the "Owner" tab and click "Edit." you first need to add your user account under ownership to full access. then (from the main file security setting screen click edit to) change the user access rights to full. once this is done copy the rec.exe file accross into the system32 folder and replace. double click to run or create a shortcut on the desktop if you want to run it easily. It's worked 100% on all the systems I have done this on. If you would like the recdisc.exe file feel free to e-mail me and I will gladly send it to you. quite happy to give a more detailed rundown if anybody need it. Hope this helps" Can you look at one of your Vista boots and see if C:\Windows\System32\recdisc.exe is present? If it is, then I find it awfully strange that they hid it like an Easter Egg. I'd really appreciate your letting me know (or I guess I can check out a couple of my neighbors' boxes who have Vista or the next notebook I see with someone (hopefully with their consent) :>) I took this screenshot from a very very recent build of Windows 7, because I didn't have Vista handy to take the shot from it and it's sure in every build I've had of Windows 7. And I wouldn't knowingly promote piracy, but I am under the impression since this tool is in Win 7 that MSFT had it and kept it. http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 http://www.downloadsquad.com/2008/01...-vista-recover If it's not there in SP1, then the 64 dollar question I'd love to ask people at Redmond and I will try to, is why in the world did they remove it and then put it back in Win 7. I had Vista SP2, but I formatted it off my box so I don't know whether it had it there or not given what you've said. I don't want to accuse someone of something that might not be the case, but has MSFT been awfully quiet about this because they dindn't want to dent their sales of Vista Retail or Vista volume licenses if people knew they could get this tool for free? I'd sure like to know what went on behind the scenes at MSFT if this is either snipped from Vista SP1 RTM or hidden in System 32. It makes me remind myself to always look in System 32 and see what utility might be hiding there that I haven't heard about! Why in the world would they hide a great tool? Has anyone mentioned this to you or have you been able to discuss it (without asking you to discuss something you might have shared at an MVP meeting at Redmond or something similar?) I know people on those teams and in the next couple days I'm going to be asking them what happened to it to be either 1) hidden in System 32 in RTM 2) Snipped from RTM 3) Almost completely not mentioned in any MSKB, Vista Help, Technet or MSDN article I can find. I also read the Vista team blog pretty regularly, and I don't remember its mention. I can always post it on one of Sinofsky's blogs on his Engineering Win 7 blog and see if someone will pick up on it. Here's one instance when posting it on a twitter thread of the right person might get a response. Thanks, CH "Mike Hall - MVP" <> wrote in message news:#... > "Chad Harris" <Win7@yes_she_can.net> wrote in message > news:... >> Malke recently wrote: >> >> "{This has not been my experience nor that of my colleagues in doing many >> hundreds of restore-to-factory-condition jobs on many different brands of >> computers. The recovery disks work fine as long as there are no hardware >> issues and the correct recovery disks are used." >> >> Malke >> >> MS-MVP >> Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! >> http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ >> >> Richard Urban also seemed to agree in a recent post on the same thread >> asking me what I meant by "recovery disc". Mr. Urban asked me the other >> day: >> >> "What exactly do you consider a recovery disk? Lets all get on the same >> page >> here." >> >> I'm delighted to get us "all on the same page here." >> >> There is a recovery disk (a disk image) you can make yourself by using >> TrueImage or some other such program. Then there are recovery disks that >> come with a new computer. Which are you talking about?" >> >> -- >> >> Richard Urban >> Microsoft MVP >> Windows Desktop Experience >> >> I'd like to state to Mr. Urban emphatically that I've had Acronis for >> years. >> I've helped on their forums. Many people can't recover with the disc >> Acronis makes. >> >> When I'm trying to fix a Microsoft Windows Operating System, in Vista or >> any >> build of Windows 7, I prefer to use the tools that Microsoft has made >> rather >> than Acronis. I'm going to be blunt here. Microsoft pays their >> engineers >> far more than Acronis will ever dream of paying theirs and there is a >> damn >> good reason. Microsoft's engineers have considerably more education, >> training, imagination, and competence than Acronis' personnel, and >> frankly >> Acronis backups (the .tibs) and their Recovery Disc often results in >> failure. >> >> OEM Recovery Discs often result in failure and if you watch this group >> everyday, you'll see scores of people complaining in a short period of >> time >> that their OEM recovery disc isn't worth using it for a Frisbee. I've >> quoted the newest post for help on this thread as I type this to >> underscore >> my point, and also to educate people, including MVPs that Microsoft has >> addressed this problem with the ability to make a Startup Repair disc in >> the >> Windows Operating System when they RTM'd Vista SP1 over one year ago on >> April 15, 2008. They have elected to continue this utility reached from >> the >> All Programs Menu>Maintenance and ensconced in the C:\Windows\System32 >> folder in every service pack of Vista including the soon to be released >> SP2 >> and they are including it in the next Operating System which I have on >> good >> authority is called Windows 7 in each and every interim build until >> Windows >> 7 RTMs. >> >> I have a screenshot below: >> >> This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: >> >> http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 >> >> This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso >> that >> allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista >> SP1 >> and later Programs menu. >> >> Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) >> http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ >> >> >> I'd like to once again distinguish between incompetent OEM Recovery discs >> and to underscore, highlight, enhance, and showcase that Microsoft, the >> company who makes the Windows Operating System as best I can tell (I've >> checked carefully on this) has responded forcefully to Malke's contention >> with a utility they placed in Windows Vista SP1 and every other build and >> version of the OS including Vista SP2 through Windows 7 Build 7106 all >> the >> way to Windows 7 RTM. >> >> hp vista 64 recovery error 1002 by deck60 on 4/12/2008 @ 9:46PM >> >> ***This is posted on this group Malke and it's typical of hundreds of >> posts >> I've answered here if not a thousand:*** >> >> "i had a problem and used the reinstall disks and it went all the way >> through and on disk 3 it came up with error 1002 contact hp if this >> problem continues if i take out the dvd and let it boot it has a boot >> error i think it wiped my hd clean but not sure if i try the boot on >> the hd using the recovery then it brings this error imedatley upon >> loading why cant they give you a real vista disk I have only had it a >> week and it seems to be dead should i take it back or what I am >> begining to hate vista" >> >> Psst Malke-- >> >> 1) We don't want them to "hate Vista." >> 2) Mr. Ballmer and Mr. Sinofsky and thousands of former Vista and current >> Win 7 team members don't want them to "hate Vista." >> 3) None of the MVPs or TAP participants wants them to "hate Vista." >> 4) No one who helps here regularly wants them to "hate Vista." >> 5) Our goal is to get Vista fixed here, as is yours. The links I've just >> shown you maximize the chance to do that, they don't lose peoples' >> settings, >> docs, files, folders, pics, music, movies and schoolwork. >> 6) These kids can't afford $1600 to have the material retrieved from >> their >> unbacked up hard drive, and neither can a lot of people out of school for >> years. >> 7) That's why Jim Allchin and the Vista team began to work on this >> utility >> to put it in SP1 before the Vista Beta was over and well before Vista >> RTM'd. >> Many of us hammered the point home it was needed, and MSFT listened. >> Unfortunately there are a lot of MVPs who are unaware that it even exists >> who keep touting OEM recovery discs. >> >> 8) Again, I drew you a picture of what I'm talking about to make it easy >> for >> you: >> >> This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: >> >> http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 >> >> This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso >> that >> allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista >> SP1 >> and later Programs menu. >> >> Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) >> http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ >> >> What would you rather use? The exact same bits from Microsoft from their >> Vista DVD to repair the OS or some inferior crap from some OEM who is way >> too cheap to give anyone an OS DVD with their newly purchased box? >> >> I think I know the results of any poll in any demography with any age >> group. >> I know I know what Microsoft's intentions were in making this tool. >> >> I hope this answers both Malke's question and Mr. Urban's question. I'm >> delighted to take followups. It was my impression that a number of >> people >> who do great work helping on this group were unaware Microsoft has done >> this >> because they never have mentioned it that I can tell, including scores of >> MVPs. >> >> Best, >> >> CH >> >> > > > Chad > > According to info on the Internet, the recovery disk option only appeared > on the Vista SP1 beta, and has not appeared on any kosher Vista since > then. > > This would suggest that Neosmart unofficially extracted the tool, not that > it is a bad thing unless of course it causes problems in later builds. > > -- > > Mike Hall - MVP Windows Experience > http://msmvps.com/blogs/mikehall/ |
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Steve McGarrett
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On Tue, 14 Apr 2009 02:13:55 -0400, "Mike Hall - MVP"
<> wrote: >A failing recovery disk is not a Vista issue.. it is a bad DVD or failing >optical drive.. You quoted 650 freaking lines just to add that???? |
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Chad Harris
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Mike--
"A failing recovery disk is not a Vista issue.. it is a bad DVD or failing optical drive." With all respect due, I've seen many times where that isn't the case. I've seen many many failing recovery discs where the optical drive worked perfectly, before and after the recovery disk failed either for viewing a disc or burning. And my question would always be in case you want to entertain the hypothesis that all these people who post here and in the setup group have bad OEM recovery disks from the multiple OEMs who supply them: 1) After your OEM disk/partition to recover failed, how did things work out when you tried all the tools [I showed the person needing help]. These are the modalities I always offer that are :Made in Redmond Washington on the MSFT campus. 1) 3 system restore doors at Win Adv Options 2) 1 LKGC at Win Adv Options 3) Making a Startup Repair Disk from the utility in the Vista C:\Windows\System32\recdisc.exe folder or downloading it from NeoWin or places like the Download squad link 4) After the disk is made, Startup Repair, the Bootrec switches, or System Restore from Startup Repair. 5) If they could get hold of the DVD I'd offer an upgrade install aka a repair install of Vista using the DVD. That's 6 Mike without a Vista DVD and 7 if they have it if in fact they have a bad recovery disk. Statistically the number of posts I've fixed on these 2 groups and many other forums and in person where the recovery disk did not work after maticulously cleaning it and when I knew the optical drive did work and could quickly test it, doesn't support that so many people are getting defective OEM recovery disks, but again if someone I'm helping tells me that, I'm going to be quick to offer them 6 ways to repair from Startup Repair and F8 that don't depend on that disk and comes from Microsoft. Microsoft may for some really interesting reason be hiding the fact it's there but I'm not when I'm helping them. BTW why do you think it hasn't been mentioned at all on this group or the Vista Setup group with so many MVPs flocking around and Darrell Gorter[MSFT] generously giving his time to help for many days in the setup group in when Vista RTM was new? I'm sure Darrell would know the answers to what seems to be a mystery to me. Please take a look at my other post to you. Thanks, CH "Mike Hall - MVP" <> wrote in message news:... > "Chad Harris" <Win7@yes_she_can.net> wrote in message > news:... >> Richard-- >> >> After I posted screenshots and "how tos" that might well work for them to >> get their Vistas back intact basically promoting tools made by Microsoft, >> specifically Startup Repair,(including 3 Bootrec switches from its cmd >> prompt, system restore from Startup Repair's menu, and the F8 Windows >> Advanced Options where 3 of them offer the opportunity to use System >> Restore. I would note that I've seen for whatever reason, System Restore >> may work from one of those 4 options, and not the other 3. I include >> recommendations from Last Known Good Configuration (LKGC) although >> statistically that registry snapshot is a "hail Mary pass." If they >> rarely have a Vista DVD, then I'd include doing a repair install or an in >> place upgrade as well. Most OEM pc buyers don't get the OS DVD, much >> less than 1% in fact. >> >> I've noticed lately after I take the time and trouble to post screenshots >> and detailed links with directions, often from Microsoft on how to use >> these Microsoft tools, some brain surgeon will pop up and brilliantly say >> something in one short sentence glib like (near direct quotes) without >> providing any substantive help because they don't know how to help: >> >> "Don't waste your time; format the box." >> >> "Don't waste your time; call HP." >> >> "Don't waste your time; use the recovery discs--they work for me" >> >> "Don't waste your time use the recovery partition." >> >> Or as Malke said hours ago and he should know better to a college student >> whose recovery disk failed: >> >> "That's not a Vista issue." >> >> Let's see: Microsoft thinks it's not a Vista issue to repair Vista so >> strongly that they went out of their way to provide the way to make a >> Vista Repair disc in Vista SP1 and every build of every OS and every >> Service Pack after Vista SP1 (as you'll see when Vista SP2 or Win 7 RTMs >> or as you've already seen). >> >> Boy that helps the hell out of the poster doesn't it? Let me ask you >> something. Given the fact that MSFT got some of their best and brightest >> to develop repair tools that are available from Vista even when the >> individual does not have a Vista DVD, do you believe MSFT thinks >> providing those Tools on Vista from Redmond teams is not a Vista issue? >> >> Then why the hell did the make the Windows Advanced Options Menu and >> Startup Repair available to everyone for free as of Vista SP1? >> >> Why did they make the Recovery Console (poorly understood by most end >> users) and currently gone? >> >> Why did the Win RE team post directions to install Win RE's tools on the >> OS on their blog back on January 12, 2007 at the link below? >> >> http://blogs.msdn.com/winre/archive/...hard-disk.aspx >> >> http://blogs.msdn.com/winre/archive/...sing-waik.aspx >> >> I think I have Exhibits "A" and "B" that Microsoft feels repairing the OS >> is an OS issue and they damn well put their repair tools in the OS over a >> year ago in April 2008 and they plan on keeping them there in the next OS >> because I'm looking at them. >> >> I'd put Malke's nasty comment up as the most ridiculous comment I've seen >> in the history of newsgroups or forums. That was simply an absurd thing >> to say, and it wouldn't help the OP a scintilla. >> >> I'd pose this question. What the hell kind of issue is it? Microsoft >> knows well that these Recovery Disks are pieces of crap. I saw a lot of >> Beta testers tell them over and over to do something about it. And guess >> what? They friggin' did. >> >> They accepted the fact that they and the OEMs weren't going to put out >> the money to ever give away the OS DVD, and before it the XP CD. So they >> put a tool in the Windows OS beginning with Vista SP1 to provide the >> panoply of repair tools that they offer on that DVD. >> >> All this displays is pure ignorance of the tools available/ a bad >> attitude, or the quintessence of both. >> >> The idea of posting in this group is to fix a broken OS (often that won't >> boot) or to fix a problem where someone can't it, or to fix a problem >> where a boot has been hidden because say the BCD or MBR has been >> overwritten by a subsequent boot in a dual boot/multiboot situation with >> different OS's on the box, some from MSFT, sometimes from MSFT and Linux. >> >> Telling the person coming here for help that it's not a Vista problem is >> like telling a person coming to a hospital ER bleeding profusely from the >> chest or abdomen that "it's not a hospital problem--go back and find your >> mother." >> >> As I said a while ago to Malke: >> >> Malkesoft doesn't see repairing Vista the best way as a Vista problem, >> but Micrososft sure as hell does and they proved it here: >> >> http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 >> >> I thought it was hilarious when Malke said when the Recovery Disks don't >> work, it's not a Vista or MSFT issue. That's absurd. If that's true then >> why did MSFT, realizing that the OEM recovery disks/partitions don't >> work, make Startup Repair available with Vista SP1? You think that was >> by accident? But it seems they did it so quietly (it's not mentioned in >> any MSKB I can find nor in the SP1 release notes nor in Vista Help >> articles either from the OS or on the web anywhere). >> >> I think it was because a lot of us urged MSFT during the Vista Beta to >> make Startup Repair available when OEM partners refused to ship a Vista >> OS. Note below that Dell's Media Chief promised he would ship a Vista OS >> DVD with every box Dell sold. They aren't doing that tonight and haven't >> been doing it. >> >> With all respect due to anyone this is pure ignorance to the 64th power. >> Why in the hell would anyone urge someone who needs help to do this, when >> Microsoft has busted their butts to make tools far superior with >> developers and PMs who know far more about lower level booting at Redmond >> like Jim Allchin, like Steve Sinofsky and their teams? >> >> Let me put it another way. Richard Urban loves Acronis, but in this >> situation I'm taking it off the table. Why do I say that Richard? A lot >> of these people have not backed up. Most of them if not all of them who >> come here for help don't have Acronis. Most of them aren't knowledgeable >> and experienced Windows mavens and enthusiasts who are also professionals >> ***like you are who fix people with TLC every day***. And as some of >> them say, they aren't very familiar with computer fixing. So if I say >> to you, Richard: >> >> Here's an HP box. Or a Sony box, or an Acer or an Asus notebook. With >> it came Recovery Disks, or a recovery partition. Malke seemed to imply >> for example that in his hands, the recovery disks always work. I'm >> willing to bet that I can take any box with a Vista or Windows 7 OS. I >> can hand you or Malke the OEM recovery discs, or an OEM recovery >> partition (take both of them) and I'll use MSFT's tools. >> >> Keep in mind Richard, that thanks to what MSFT Win RE teams and the >> Storage Team and teams from the servers did in Vista SP1, there is now >> the ability (free) for anyone to make a Repair Disk that has the exact >> same bits on it that a Vista Retail RTM has for repair. I realize the >> nuance in VSS in system restore that exists between some versions of >> Vista, but that's really another issue and not too relevant here. >> >> Do you want to choose the recovery discs/partition over Startup Repair >> and its options, or F8 and its options? That would seem ludicrous. >> >> But what these posters who have posted in the last 24 hours on the setup >> group seem to be saying is LOL >> >> "This guy giving you instructions for Startup Repair or F8 is nuts. >> Don't waste your time. Either use the Recovery Disks and if they don't >> work wipe the box or call HP." >> >> And who the hell do they get when the end users "call HP" or "MSFT" for >> that matter. They don't get the engineers who have degrees in computer >> science from high quality schools who dot MSFT campuses and abound at >> Redmond who work with CTO's on custom installations for enterprises and >> midlevel enterprises, and I know some of those. >> >> They get 5 cities in India and people from Tata, Convergys of Ohio, and >> other tech support puppy mills who are low waged butts in seats who also >> don't speak English intelligibly for the most part, and don't know jack >> about fixing Office or Vista or XP and soon Windows 7 or other software >> from MSFT. And if you want to find a subject that a softie will profess >> complete ignorance about, it's their phone support for end users. It's a >> complete "see no evil here no evil paradigm" yet they'll always say in >> some flowerly tone that we want the best experience possible for our >> customers. You betcha goshdarnit. But they aren't getting it when they >> phone MSFT for support and anyone with a heart that beats knows that. >> >> It's a waste of time to call them. The end user gets a much higher >> quality of help from the contributors here. They get Richard Urban don't >> they? And they get the rest of us. So you tell me: >> >> What kind of post basically says "Screw the guy who showed you how to use >> the tools from the Vista teams who developed Win RE and are experts at >> low level boot issues, storage issues, the server teams at Redmond who >> developed these tools"--just use the recovery partition or "take your >> computer into the store." >> >> I have a dose of the real world. A lot of these people are kids in >> college like the one who posted yesterday or in this economy they can't >> afford to have someone pull their school work off a hard drive. If you >> call some of the national services who do this their average price is >> $1600 bucks. These kids aren't Don Trump's kids--they don't have that >> kind of money. >> >> And most importantly, many of them already tried the Recovery >> partitions/discs and they simply couldn't cut it. >> >> But they did not know they might well be able to recover their OS with >> the tools MSFT made for them, and that MSFT offers a way to make a >> startup repair disk starting with Vista SP1. I haven't seen mention of >> it on these two groups, but maybe I missed it the last few months when I >> wasn't monitoring them. It's been available for nearly a year when Vista >> RTM'd SP1 in early April and then had to add some bits to make it work. >> >> And besides the fact that the OEM recovery disks/partitions don't work a >> high percentage of the time, what happens to all their documents, >> settings, pics, music, videos they want and need to get back. If they >> are restored to factory settings when the OEM recovery disks/partitions >> work, what happens to the stuff they wanted to save? It just went bye >> bye. >> >> The Startup Repair/aka WinRE tools and the F8 tools at the Windows >> Advanced Options Menu, don't lose all this work that's vital for them. >> If they have the Vista DVD and this is a small percentage of people who >> buy it on their pc, then they have the additional option of trying a >> repair install. It eliminates the chance that these individuals who >> can't afford $1600 bucks from a professional as someone LOL out of >> contact with reality who is an MVP recommended a couple nights ago to a >> college student. >> >> Acronis True Image >> >> From Richard Urban: >> >> "I have never - EVER - had a failure on any computer that I work on >> (hundreds) using Acronis TrueImage - either creating an image or >> restoring an image. This is what **I** consider a recovery disk (image). >> >> But Richard, most of the people who post here for help >> >> 1) Don't have Acronis True Image >> 2) Haven't backed up although we urge them to repeatedly as do many >> websites despite the relatively easy backup modalities in Vista >> 3) Have already seen recovery disks/partitions fail >> >> From what you've typed, Richard, it's evident that you'll stand behind >> your customers, look out for them, and do everything you can to help them >> backup/repair their systems. The service you offer is the quality that >> any customer wants to have, and they are very lucky to have your help, in >> what seems to be a boutique service that you run spending a lot of time >> and truly caring for your customers. >> >> I appreciate your recounting your experience with Acronis Richard, but >> thousands of threads here, and tens of thousands of people have had a >> much different experience. Acronis in your hands obviously seems to work >> very well. >> >> Acronis Official Forums >> >> http://www.wilderssecurity.com/forumdisplay.php?f=64 >> >> As I said, two of the main "common denominator" issues for these people >> is making a boot disc that works, and recovering from the Acronis backups >> that they make because the .tibs get corrupted. >> >> I've always made it a point to have every ATI version, but I've never >> needed them. Backup to media or a hard drive is more reliable for me, >> and I don't have to take the time to try to ID files and folders or to >> decompress them from a .tib that might be corrupted. >> >> If you google you can find infinite hits for people who can't make any of >> Acronis' options work. >> >> I realize Acronis has had a large number of accolades and satisfied >> customers, and is considered the Geek imaging option of choice for a lot >> of people. I'm glad it works well for you and the people who value it >> and its tools. >> >> I haven't felt the need though I have it and study its new features every >> year, to use Acronis. I haven't had an operating system on any of the >> 4-6 boots I normally have going that I couldn't repair go South. Much of >> the time, I break a conservative rule and I have multiple Beta apps on >> Betas. The reason for that is that I love to see what's new from MSFT or >> other 3rd party apps, including Office 14 now in Alpha which will be >> Office 2010, and Win 7. The time sequence forces me to put Betas on Betas >> and I upgrade from Betas as the builds progress because I like to see the >> new features. I know the characteristics of interim builds that won't see >> the light of day, but I like finding bugs and making suggestions hoping >> to get my input into the OS or Office. I also realize that some interim >> builds represent two steps forward and three steps back for specific >> features, but of course that's the nature of Beta. >> >> When the OS or Office RTMs, then I move to an RTM for more stability and >> the newest features, but soon it will have a Beta SP on it and a lot of >> 3rd party betas. I don't bother to make test boots, because I fell like >> I can get out of any problem that comes up using the tools that MSDN or >> MSFT has available like Startup Repair, Bootrec switches, or SubInACL. I >> don't think I'm grandiosely saying that my boots are indestructible, but >> from not knowing the Start Button from my belly button years ago, I've >> learned enough to make fixes fairly easy for me. >> >> Despite the fact that I have Beta on Beta for much of the time until an >> RTM build is available, what works for me is to backup directly to DVD >> (using no Backup mechanism) and to an external HD. I don't have to >> worry about compressions corrupting, and WYSIWYG >> >> The main point I'm trying to make here is that there seems lately to be a >> pandemic of "helpers" here including some MVPs who at the slightest hint >> of a problem booting Vista, tell the people who come for help to turn >> tail and wipe the box or to use either two poor choices, a recovery >> partition or OEM recovery discs. >> >> It frankly seems ridiculous that all the people who are doing this seem >> to have the thesis that Vista has no tools and the recovery OEM discs/or >> OEM partitions are the answer(some hidden, some not which confuse a lot >> of end users). This is why you have a current post on the setup group >> where someone's uncle wiped the recovery partiton along with his box with >> "killdisk" although I can't imagine why someone would read the >> description of the software, let alone the name and think it was some >> kind of Rx for repair. The uncle didn't know how to get into the >> notebook after losing his password, and it would have been great if he'd >> come here for help, but unfortunately he didn't.) >> >> You've been helping on these threads for years, and I have as well, >> although I got involved with some elections for months and spent my time >> there. There are a lot of posts where those two OEM modalities just don't >> work. I helped on the XP groups as you did, and on Microsoft chats and >> other community forums for years, and I wish I had a nickel for all the >> people that I helped fix who had *ALREADY TRIED* the OEM disc or >> partition and got nada/zip/nowhere. That's the point when they posted >> for help. On the chats that used to be available many of us spent >> literally hours helping these people use the F8 options, or my favorite >> during my time on the XP groups and chats, an XP Repair Install (often >> called an Inplace Upgrade--in fact there are MSKBs with both names in the >> title and they do the same thing the same way). MVPs Doug Knox and Kelly >> Theriott often referenced this; it was my first choice for a repair when >> people had the XP CD (and most of them of course did not). >> >> http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/u...ps/doug92.mspx >> >> http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...erts/knox.mspx >> >> Doug Knox: How Do I do a Repair Install >> http://www.dougknox.com/xp/tips/xp_repair_install.htm >> >> How to perform an in-place upgrade (reinstallation) of Windows >> http://support.microsoft.com/kb/315341 >> >> In my hands fixing XP no boots or systemic problems for these people, and >> people live, the best efficacy was for ***an XP repair install/inplace >> upgrade***, but they needed to get their hands on an XP DVD. And to >> reference Acronis, when they came for help, they hadn't used it and >> hadn't backed up. XP's backup left much to be desired but that's been >> discussed and for another time. >> >> 300 + MSFT OEM named partners weren't about to help them get one, so they >> were on their own to buy one. >> >> I have documentation from Dell (Dell's Lionel Manchaca, Digital Media >> Manager for Dell @ Roundrock--15 year Dell Employee, that promised when >> Vista was about to RTM 1/30/07 that they were going to give each person >> who bought a Dell a genuine Microsoft Vista DVD, but friends of mine who >> have recently bought Dell haven't gotten them so I don't know what's up >> there. With spare time, I'll tweet him or call him and find out what >> happened to break his promise. >> >> Lionel Manchaca's Broken Promise >> http://direct2dell.org/one2one/archi...0/17/3132.aspx >> >> Ask Lionel Manchaca why he broke the promise above >> http://twitter.com/LionelatDell >> >> Lionel Manchaca wrote at this link: >> http://direct2dell.org/one2one/archi...0/17/3132.aspx >> >> >> Other users have expressed concern about not having the operating system >> reinstallation CD when they need it. When ordering a new machine, all >> consumers and corporate customers can opt for the Windows CD for around >> $10. Additionally, since July 2004, most new PCs (Dell gaming systems all >> ship with the OS CD)come pre-loaded with a disk partition that contains >> PC Restore, an applcation that allows users to reinstall system software >> quickly. See these instructions for how to use PC Restore to reinstall >> the operating system and Dell factory-installed applications in about 10 >> minutes. >> >> Manchaca then crossed this out and wrote what's below: >> >> "Update: Thanks to Direct2Dell reader Steven and a couple of Dell >> employees for pointing out a mistake I made in my original post. When I >> wrote this, the OS media was listed as an option in the configuration for >> $0. I mis-read the number, and for that mistake, I apologize. Also, >> though this been in the works for some time before now, it's now >> official. For U.S. consumer and small business customers, all systems >> will now ship with an operating system disc. This change will take effect >> in Europe by later next month. In Asia, things are unchanged-we've always >> shipped OS discs with systems there." >> >> MSFT's OEM VP has historically concurred in this policy through the reign >> of now departed Scott DiValerio who incidentally refused all calls to >> discuss the issue. I saw DiValerio's employee get booed at a System >> Builders meeting by System Builders over this very issue. A group of >> System Builders wanted to know why they were required to provide the >> actual Microsoft XP or Vista DVD to customers, and the 300+ OEM partners >> were not. >> >> The sassy glib answer was that when they sold 50,000 boxes, the same >> exemptions would be extended to them. I can document this meeting, I >> remember it as if it were 2 minutes ago. The rest of his answers to >> questions were frankly pathetic, and not anywhere on a par with the >> hundreds of MSFT presenters I've had the pleasure to watch. >> >> The boos he received were richly deserved, and had the guy been reporting >> to me in any venue and any profession, I'd have fired him on the spot >> both for his arrogant answer to MSFT Partners who were also customers, >> and his simple reprehensible lack of knowledge of hdw and software >> unusual for a MSFT presenter. I thought he was a poor representative of >> MSFT considering the high quality of hires for all their teams and many >> people a lot of us know at Redmond and other MSFT campuses. >> >> Best, >> >> CH >> >> >> >> >> >> "Richard Urban" <> wrote in message >> news:#4#... >>> I have never - EVER - had a failure on any computer that I work on >>> (hundreds) using Acronis TrueImage - either creating an image or >>> restoring an image. This is what **I** consider a recovery disk (image). >>> >>> I make an image of every single computer I work on prior to performing >>> any work. If something blows up (happens occasionally) I can get the >>> customers computer back to the way it was when he gave it to me and >>> start again. Now, if the hard drive is physically defective (bad sectors >>> etc.) of course the image will fail in the same identical way. >>> >>> As a service I make an image of a customers computer before I return it >>> to him Yes, there is a small charge for this as I now have 8 external 1 >>> terabyte hard drives dedicated to just these image files. I tell my >>> customers that I will store the image for one year, after which the >>> drive will be recycled. >>> >>> For an additional fee I will create the image file on CD/DVD disks. I >>> test each set of disk by performing a destructive recovery (the only way >>> to be certain they actually work) and then give the disks to the >>> customer when he picks up his computer. >>> >>> If a former customer did not have me create the recovery CD/DVD disks, >>> and he/she does something that damages their computer I can (for a small >>> fee) return their computer to the way it was when I gave it back to them >>> last year from my external disk image. Takes about 10-20 minutes. >>> >>> People have come back to me dozens of times for me to restore their >>> computers. I have never run into a problem. >>> >>> No, I don't have a shop or store front. I work out of my home at a very >>> leisurely pace, and can afford to spend the extra time needed to do the >>> above. >>> >>> I don't know what you may be doing wrong but I trust TrueImage >>> completely! >>> >>> -- >>> >>> Richard Urban >>> Microsoft MVP >>> Windows Desktop Experience >>> >>> >>> >>> "Chad Harris" <Win7@yes_she_can.net> wrote in message >>> news:... >>>> Malke recently wrote: >>>> >>>> "{This has not been my experience nor that of my colleagues in doing >>>> many >>>> hundreds of restore-to-factory-condition jobs on many different brands >>>> of >>>> computers. The recovery disks work fine as long as there are no >>>> hardware >>>> issues and the correct recovery disks are used." >>>> >>>> Malke >>>> >>>> MS-MVP >>>> Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! >>>> http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ >>>> >>>> Richard Urban also seemed to agree in a recent post on the same thread >>>> asking me what I meant by "recovery disc". Mr. Urban asked me the >>>> other >>>> day: >>>> >>>> "What exactly do you consider a recovery disk? Lets all get on the same >>>> page >>>> here." >>>> >>>> I'm delighted to get us "all on the same page here." >>>> >>>> There is a recovery disk (a disk image) you can make yourself by using >>>> TrueImage or some other such program. Then there are recovery disks >>>> that >>>> come with a new computer. Which are you talking about?" >>>> >>>> -- >>>> >>>> Richard Urban >>>> Microsoft MVP >>>> Windows Desktop Experience >>>> >>>> I'd like to state to Mr. Urban emphatically that I've had Acronis for >>>> years. >>>> I've helped on their forums. Many people can't recover with the disc >>>> Acronis makes. >>>> >>>> When I'm trying to fix a Microsoft Windows Operating System, in Vista >>>> or any >>>> build of Windows 7, I prefer to use the tools that Microsoft has made >>>> rather >>>> than Acronis. I'm going to be blunt here. Microsoft pays their >>>> engineers >>>> far more than Acronis will ever dream of paying theirs and there is a >>>> damn >>>> good reason. Microsoft's engineers have considerably more education, >>>> training, imagination, and competence than Acronis' personnel, and >>>> frankly >>>> Acronis backups (the .tibs) and their Recovery Disc often results in >>>> failure. >>>> >>>> OEM Recovery Discs often result in failure and if you watch this group >>>> everyday, you'll see scores of people complaining in a short period of >>>> time >>>> that their OEM recovery disc isn't worth using it for a Frisbee. I've >>>> quoted the newest post for help on this thread as I type this to >>>> underscore >>>> my point, and also to educate people, including MVPs that Microsoft has >>>> addressed this problem with the ability to make a Startup Repair disc >>>> in the >>>> Windows Operating System when they RTM'd Vista SP1 over one year ago on >>>> April 15, 2008. They have elected to continue this utility reached >>>> from the >>>> All Programs Menu>Maintenance and ensconced in the C:\Windows\System32 >>>> folder in every service pack of Vista including the soon to be released >>>> SP2 >>>> and they are including it in the next Operating System which I have on >>>> good >>>> authority is called Windows 7 in each and every interim build until >>>> Windows >>>> 7 RTMs. >>>> >>>> I have a screenshot below: >>>> >>>> This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: >>>> >>>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 >>>> >>>> This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso >>>> that >>>> allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista >>>> SP1 >>>> and later Programs menu. >>>> >>>> Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) >>>> http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ >>>> >>>> >>>> I'd like to once again distinguish between incompetent OEM Recovery >>>> discs >>>> and to underscore, highlight, enhance, and showcase that Microsoft, the >>>> company who makes the Windows Operating System as best I can tell (I've >>>> checked carefully on this) has responded forcefully to Malke's >>>> contention >>>> with a utility they placed in Windows Vista SP1 and every other build >>>> and >>>> version of the OS including Vista SP2 through Windows 7 Build 7106 all >>>> the >>>> way to Windows 7 RTM. >>>> >>>> hp vista 64 recovery error 1002 by deck60 on 4/12/2008 @ 9:46PM >>>> >>>> ***This is posted on this group Malke and it's typical of hundreds of >>>> posts >>>> I've answered here if not a thousand:*** >>>> >>>> "i had a problem and used the reinstall disks and it went all the way >>>> through and on disk 3 it came up with error 1002 contact hp if this >>>> problem continues if i take out the dvd and let it boot it has a boot >>>> error i think it wiped my hd clean but not sure if i try the boot on >>>> the hd using the recovery then it brings this error imedatley upon >>>> loading why cant they give you a real vista disk I have only had it a >>>> week and it seems to be dead should i take it back or what I am >>>> begining to hate vista" >>>> >>>> Psst Malke-- >>>> >>>> 1) We don't want them to "hate Vista." >>>> 2) Mr. Ballmer and Mr. Sinofsky and thousands of former Vista and >>>> current >>>> Win 7 team members don't want them to "hate Vista." >>>> 3) None of the MVPs or TAP participants wants them to "hate Vista." >>>> 4) No one who helps here regularly wants them to "hate Vista." >>>> 5) Our goal is to get Vista fixed here, as is yours. The links I've >>>> just >>>> shown you maximize the chance to do that, they don't lose peoples' >>>> settings, >>>> docs, files, folders, pics, music, movies and schoolwork. >>>> 6) These kids can't afford $1600 to have the material retrieved from >>>> their >>>> unbacked up hard drive, and neither can a lot of people out of school >>>> for >>>> years. >>>> 7) That's why Jim Allchin and the Vista team began to work on this >>>> utility >>>> to put it in SP1 before the Vista Beta was over and well before Vista >>>> RTM'd. >>>> Many of us hammered the point home it was needed, and MSFT listened. >>>> Unfortunately there are a lot of MVPs who are unaware that it even >>>> exists >>>> who keep touting OEM recovery discs. >>>> >>>> 8) Again, I drew you a picture of what I'm talking about to make it >>>> easy for >>>> you: >>>> >>>> This is a screenshot of the two ways to do this: >>>> >>>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 >>>> >>>> This is the link from Neosmart's website to download and burn the .iso >>>> that >>>> allows you to do the same thing as the Maintenance listing on the Vista >>>> SP1 >>>> and later Programs menu. >>>> >>>> Windows Vista Recovery Disc (Vista Startup Repair .iso Download) >>>> http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/window...disc-download/ >>>> >>>> What would you rather use? The exact same bits from Microsoft from >>>> their >>>> Vista DVD to repair the OS or some inferior crap from some OEM who is >>>> way >>>> too cheap to give anyone an OS DVD with their newly purchased box? >>>> >>>> I think I know the results of any poll in any demography with any age >>>> group. >>>> I know I know what Microsoft's intentions were in making this tool. >>>> >>>> I hope this answers both Malke's question and Mr. Urban's question. I'm >>>> delighted to take followups. It was my impression that a number of >>>> people >>>> who do great work helping on this group were unaware Microsoft has done >>>> this >>>> because they never have mentioned it that I can tell, including scores >>>> of >>>> MVPs. >>>> >>>> Best, >>>> >>>> CH >>>> >>>> > > > A failing recovery disk is not a Vista issue.. it is a bad DVD or failing > optical drive.. > > > -- > > Mike Hall - MVP Windows Experience > http://msmvps.com/blogs/mikehall/ |
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Chad Harris
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Hi Steve--
I always value Mike's input, but I've never understood the convention to always snip the post you're answering (it has a newgroup "term name" because when they're long or short they get in the way of finding the comment. I know my post was freaking long, but I wanted to make the point that MSFT offers tools for people to fix, Steve. I just answer the post and then if someone wants to see what the post was I answered they can scroll down easily enough. Do me a favor, Steve and tell me if if you see this on your Vista box or boxes: Can you check in your Vista which I assume is SP1, and see if the place I'm showing in this screenshot from Win 7 is there? I formatted all my Vista boots which were SP2 and I don't know if they were there. http://www.flickr.com/photos/chadharris16 Could you go to C:\Windows\System32\recdisc.exe and tell me if the utility is there? I think it is but at this hour I can't wake someone up to check their Vista box and all my boots are Win 7. I'll try to check some Vista boxes tomorrow. If it's not on All Programs and is hidden like an Easter Egg in System 32, that's strange to say the least. It's on the All Programs menu in Win 7--so I assumed it had to be in SP1. See C4 Consulting's comment in gray here: http://social.technet.microsoft.com/...-b9c3df52860e/ Thanks, CH Thanks, CH "Steve McGarrett" <> wrote in message news:... > On Tue, 14 Apr 2009 02:13:55 -0400, "Mike Hall - MVP" > <> wrote: > >>A failing recovery disk is not a Vista issue.. it is a bad DVD or failing >>optical drive.. > > You quoted 650 freaking lines just to add that???? |
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