Volume Shadow Copy
The clipboard is the Windows feature that allows you to temporarily store text. The clipboard acts as a draft pad, allowing the user to store text, and then retrieved back later by another application.
Roll Back Driver
The i386 folder. It should be in C:\Windows
Backup and Restore Feature in Windows 7 creates safety copies of your most important files. Let Windows choose what to back up, or pick individual folders, libraries, or drives. Windows can back up files on whatever schedule you choose. Just set it and forget it. In Windows 7, you can back up files to another drive, your network, or a DVD. Backup and Restore for your personal PC and attached DVD or external hard drives comes with all editions of Windows. If you want to backup to a network location, say on your company's central server, network attached storage, or another computer on your network, you'll need Windows 7 Professional or Ultimate.
If you've deleted your Windows 8 program files by mistake, you can do a recovery and put it back to factory settings. Make sure you backup your files before doing so.
If you reinstalled windows without backing up any of your files, then they are gone forever.
A MUST is your Windows files which tends to be labeled as C:\Windows or instead of C:\ it would be your local drive... where your Windows files are located at. There's generally not just a list of files that you need to back up just basically anything that you don't want to lose. I backup all my music, movies, and personal pictures.
Automated system recovery is a facet of Windows XP. The purpose of this feature is to back up a user's files so that they be may restored in the event of a computer issue that causes data loss.
It's a backup of some of your windows files. If you don't plan on rolling back and removing some of your windows updates you can delete it.
You have to backup all your files (do not use windows backup utility use one those advanced versions) and then install windows. After that you have to the files back (where you would like to have them) There are some options which allow you keep your files and do not use the backup option it's called system repair. But it's not recommended because the OS can get unstable.
Yes.You can import the video back into Windows Movie Maker again (as long as it is in the correct format for the program) and extract pictures from frames using the "Take Picture from Preview"feature (only available on v2.6 version).Unfortunately, WLMM (Windows Live Movie Maker) does not have this feature.
No. Due to the main differences (Windows 3.1 is DOS and windows XP is its own operating system), you must make a backup of your files and install windows XP as fresh, then put the files back on the hard disk drive.