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Sounds like it Tom ("Lots of fun on the horizon").

I should add in my "mystery of the C: drive failure in Windows/not a failure
in Linux thread... We are a small company and I've tried to get a Windows
server in here to be able to get PC data saved to it and backed up. To date
we did get a Windows server for our website this year but that's it so far.
So what I did 5+ years ago was started adding a 2nd drive to every PC. Not
much of a cost. Then all Data saves to that drive. When C: failed D: was OK
and the rebuild was a piece of cake. This was pre-Knoppix and saved a LOT of
pain. I have NEVER had one of these D: drives fail which brings us back to
the Windows C: drive mystery :-)

Good luck !

Chuck

-----Original Message-----
From: pctech-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:pctech-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of qsrvbas@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Tuesday, December 05, 2006 8:45 PM
To: pctech@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [PCTECH] Disk imminent failure handling

pctech-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:

I've got a PC that reports a "S.M.A.R.T. Bad, backup and replace" 
message at boot-up time.

To all who replied, thanks much.

One of the nicest bits was the push to download W2K SP4. I've so 
rarely needed that that I never really tried downloading it before. 
The "standard" update has always been via internet. I have an older 
W2K install CD that includes SP2 and that's been my starting point. 
But now, after the SP4 download, it looks like that can be left 
behind with a new starting point.

At first glance, MS's site gives the basic impression that there are 
two alternatives -- update across the internet or order a CD. I 
never wanted to "order a CD" from MS and never installed W2K often 
enough to dig into it, but this caused me to look deeper and find 
that the SP4 Network Install download seems to be a good 
alternative. Download that and build my own SP4 CD.

With end-of-support looming for W2K, it's good to have that in hand. 
I expect that I'll be doing a bunch of transitioning to one form of 
Linux or another, but W2K has been fairly decent over the years once 
fully patched. It'll be nice to be able to install a useful W2K if 
ever needed again and it'll sure be handy in the coming few days.

Re David... Yeah, I've never run into a S.M.A.R.T. warning before 
either, but I sure ain't gonna complain. I've only had one other PC 
drive failure and there was no warning. A couple years ago I lost at 
least one PMR log of calls and resolutions for a whole bunch of 
problems from IBM that covered a few years. I'd love to have that 
back. I couldn't stop kicking myself after realizing I hadn't backed 
that document up for so long.

Re John... Partitioning... I went NTFS from the beginning. And while 
not needed, I do have a couple handy 'personal preference' uses for 
partitioning. One item I really like is having secondary [/Program 
Files] directories. I can stay within general standard installation 
guidelines and almost every oddball install utility seems happy as 
long as the only detail that varies is the drive letter. Maybe not 
as important as pre-W2K. Little things like that aren't hugely 
important, but every detail adds up. Besides, this was an 
experimental drive setup and I wanted to learn. My real space isn't 
on this drive anyway which is partly why I can have the backups 
on-line easily. (Man, just a couple years ago I wasn't even 
imagining the kind of space my simple home network has today. Not 
too many years earlier, I worked for some good-sized organizations 
that didn't have as much space as I have now. )

Re Chuck... Knoppix... Since I've never needed such a utility, I 
have no alternatives in hand. Our main QA guy gave me a CD with G4U 
which was one of the possibilities I thought about. It's always good 
to hear someone's recommendation, so I'll be checking Knoppix out 
too. It might help the transition to Linux since I'm going to be 
running multiple versions as time goes by. Thanks.

Re Tom... Helix... A version of Knoppix... hmmm... the site ( 
http://www.e-fense.com/helix/ ) starts out looking clean enough. 
Seems to be a very good possibility for serious efforts. And it 
helps push me into giving the Knoppix direction an early look. 
Thanks too.

Lots of fun on the horizon.

Tom Liotta


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