Bert10099
[]D [] []\/[] []D
+177|7011|United States
I want to format my computer.  But there are some things I would like to keep.  I have no flash drives, don't feel like uploading everything to a website, and it would take too many CD's if I were to put my data on them.

If I were to put my files on my drive D:, would they be lost when I format my computer?

I have two drives, my normal drive C: and Recovery drive D:.  I want to recover back to factory default settings.  I know this will format my drive C:, but I'm not sure if this will also restore my D: to default settings, and erase all the files I wanted to safe.

Any input is appreciated.
alexb
<3
+590|6210|Kentucky, USA

Make a new partition, save it on that partition, then format the first partition where your shite isn't backed up.
Mitch92uK
aka [DBS]Mitch92uK
+192|6505|United Kingdom
Is D a physically different drive or just a partition?

When you format you only format over the partition, so just move everything you want kept to your non-os partition. When you format, format over the OS partition and D drive/partition will remain in tact.
Bert10099
[]D [] []\/[] []D
+177|7011|United States
I have this:

https://img516.imageshack.us/img516/592/pc1ki7.jpg

If I do this (first selection, "recovery"):

https://img507.imageshack.us/img507/3505/pc2xk1.jpg

Will Drive D: be formatted?
Bert10099
[]D [] []\/[] []D
+177|7011|United States
I'm thinking no, since D: is used to format C:, so how could the PC format both at the same time?

Yes?
SpIk3y
Minister of Silly Walks
+67|6409|New Jersey
Like Mitch said, it depends whether or not D: is its own drive.  It is probably a partition on your C: drive.  If you do a factory recovery, it will most likely delete anything that wasn't on the computer when you bought it.  Even things on the D: partition.  My guess is that the D: drive is just a small partition to store things like drivers and factory settings.  It might not even be big enough to hold all of your back-up data.

If you know for a fact that D: is a 2nd physical hard drive, then you should be OK.

Last edited by SpIk3y (2008-06-07 13:50:06)

FatherTed
xD
+3,936|6770|so randum
Why don't you move all the shit you want saving to the other drive, then physically disconnect it?
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Brasso
member
+1,549|6900

FatherTed wrote:

Why don't you move all the shit you want saving to the other drive, then physically disconnect it?
as a recovery "disk" for a Gateway (read:prebuilt) computer, i would assume that it's a partition.  that's the way my parents' Compaq is: it has a 10 GB partition for recovery.

i would create another partition (just in case) with a program, and put your stuff there.  then just format the C drive.
"people in ny have a general idea of how to drive. one of the pedals goes forward the other one prevents you from dying"
Nessie09
I "fix" things
+107|6940|The Netherlands
Why not just buy an external HD.

Easy to fix this problem, and you can use it for backups in general.
.Sup
be nice
+2,646|6723|The Twilight Zone
With what software have you made the backup?
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Ryan
Member
+1,230|7113|Alberta, Canada

If you have music, you probably have an MP3 player.
Format, then plug your MP3 player in after and transfer the songs over.
tkoi
Utahraptor!
+148|6417|Texas
DVD-RW are the answer.

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