25 :)
so many type of boot file in win xp pro
so many type of boot file in win xp pro
It means the original source file can't be found. Did you change the file name? Are your CAPS on? Perhaps the file was deleted? There are many reasons why Windows might not be able to locate a file.
Four (4) startup disks are needed to boot Windows 2000 from floppy disks.
No. Neither windows nor NTFS tracks such data.
According to my callculations,it's 69
Four
100
Windows 95 supported file names up to 255 characters in length.
Unless you have to, it is many times advantageous to œwarm boot, or rather warm reboot, Windows . In a warm reboot, Windows restarts, but the computer doesnt, skipping the whole pre-Windows boot scree/BIOS/startup sequence. You an easily specify a warm boot in both Windows XP and Windows Vista. Just hold down SHIFT on your keyboard before clicking œRestart in Vista, or before clicking OK in the restart dialog in XP. Enjoy the extra 20 seconds!
Sure. There are many tools that can open up (uncompress) a gz file in Windows. For example, Total Commander (http://www.ghisler.com) is a nice shareware file manager for Windows that includes this ability.
A boot disk is a removable digital data storage medium from which a computer can load and run an operating system or utility program. A boot disk (sometimes called a startup disk) is a type of removable media, such as a floppy disk or a CD, that contains startup files that your computer can use to start Windows. The startup files are also stored on your computer's hard disk, but if those startup files become damaged, you can use the files on a boot disk to start Windows. In earlier operating systems that used the FAT or FAT32 file systems, such as Windows 95 and Windows 98, a boot disk was especially useful because it allowed a person to access files on a hard disk even if Windows was unable to start. This ability also represented a security risk, because anyone with a boot disk and access to the computer could start the computer and access any file. Hard disks formatted with NTFS have built-in security features that prevent using a boot disk to access files. The Windows installation disc contains the files necessary to start Windows, so it is itself a boot disk. If a problem is preventing Windows from starting, you can use the installation CD to start Windows. The installation CD also contains Startup Repair, which you can use to repair Windows if a problem prevents it from starting correctly. Startup Repair can automatically fix many of the problems that in the past required a boot disk to fix