![]() However, when I do a regular shut-down, shut of the laptop, and then turn it back on and boot into Windows,Įverything is "back ot normal". Video drivers have been lost / corrupted. ![]() ![]() I get pop-up messages to the effect that all of my Windows has lost access to all of the graphics s.w. I find that when I re-boot into Windows, the graphics are all messed up. Tested after and booted RIGHT OFF of the "stick" without ANY problems!Īs a side question (nothing to do with Acronis), I am just curious if anyoneĮVERY TIME that I boot into Linux on laptop (whether form CD, "stick", or Hard Drive) If you have any further suggestions or ideas - or even if you can tell whether there is some factor in determining WHICH flash drive devices can be used, that would be most helpful.Īnd I took my "clunky" 255 MB "stick" and ran diskpartĪgainst it there. Right now, I am "stuck in the water" trying to create a Bootable Media on a USB "stick". On top of everything else, I tried working with Acronis support today - and the result is that this "Stick" can no longer be read (or even seen consistently!) by Windows on my laptop (though Linux can still see the "stick"). However, there seems to be no way for me to get an MBR onto the "stick". ![]() I do not know if that is because the "stick" is too small (in the article, the "stick" was 8 GB while this was only 254 MB) or if there is some other factor involved. At step "1.7" (where you click on "Part List Refresh"), the drop-down did NOT include a choice of "Whole disk (MBR)" there was ONLY the single choice of "whole disk FAT12 / FAT16". When I tried to use the approach with GRUB4DOS, I had a problem trying to run the GRUB Installer. However, the partition "commands" in diskpart require that the "target" be a "disk". What I found is that (a) when I try to use the Diskpart utility, the USB "stick" is NOT seen as a "disk" at all - it is only seen as a "volume". ![]() I am running Windows XP Pro and tried to use a 254 MB USB "Stick". However, the solutions listed for me did not work. My problem: the USB pendrive needs to be formatted in FAT32. The tibx file can't be stored there as its size exceeds the 4GB limit.Ī) I could backup my C: system directly on the USB pendrive.I have EXACTLY the same problem - same error messages as Stefan. This would be my preferred method, so I could travel with a single USB dongle that fits in any pocket, instead of carrying an external HDD drive. So in case the PC fails to boot/read from the internal HDD, I could boot from the external USB pendrive and recover the whole system from the tibx file that is on the same pendrive. My goal: I would like to create a bootable USB pendrive and to copy the tibx file (that contains my Windows 10 C: partition). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
December 2022
Categories |