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This is the restoration drive and the computer manufacturer makes it hidden... it is actually a partition of your main c drive, so its called a virtual drive... all of the files, windows xp, and all of the installation programs, your motherboard and device drivers... that were original with your computer are stored on here so that you can restore your computer to factory condition. It is hidden so that you do not accidentally delete that sector of the drive. If your computer becomes corrupt, there are programs that are installed on your drive that can restore it to original factory condition, or you can make a set of windows installation discs from this sector.
A system image is an exact copy of a drive. By default, a system image includes the drives required for Windows to run. It also includes Windows and your system settings, programs, and files.
There are several ways to get to the Windows XP system restore. The easiest way to do so is by going to the help center in the control panel. Another way to access the system restore feature is by booting the computer with the Windows XP CD.
Yes. The Windows Backup and Restore Utility gives you the option to make a duplicate copy of all the data on your hard drive if you wish.
No. Changing a CPU is very similar to changing a ram chip, and neither should cause any loss of data or programs stored on the hard drive.
If you've reset it, do a windows backup in control panel. Make sure the files in the recover drive are not affected by the restore.
The C drive in Windows Operating System is the partition on which the OS is installed. It also contains installation files for other programs.
To Recover or restore your files that you have accidentally lost, System Restore might help. This is found in START-->PROGRAMS-->ACCESSORIES-->SYSTEM TOOLS--> SYSTEM RESTORE This helps when your computer is malfunctioning and crashing and was normal before. There are several dates and checkpoints that you can restore to which can be several months old. You will not lose your documents and music but programs which were installed (even games) might need reinstallation. If you have a problem with your computer you can also insert the windows boot CD (Windows CD) and install the windows over this one. It will improve performance. Also you can format your Harddisk and install the windows back again by shifting your essential files to another partition. Eg. If you want to delete C: drive, move all your music and everything else in D:
Backup and restore
The C drive in Windows Operating System is the partition on which the OS is installed. It also contains installation files for other programs.
If you are asking about creating a bootable flash drive, I can recommend an application called Bootsage to create a Windows 7 installer flash drive. It runs under Windows XP as well as Windows 7. http://firesage.com/bootsage
It should be fine, the question is why you need to do so frequently. WARNING! Reformatting your hard disk will wipe out ALL data, including Windows, programs, etc. If you don't have a Windows recovery CD or an original Windows installation CD, you will not be able to re-install Windows. Some systems come with a Windows restore partition which will not be wiped out by reformatting the hard disk.