F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Windows 10 with two operating systems!

Windows 10 with two operating systems!

Windows 10 with two operating systems!

Pages (3): Previous 1 2 3 Next
X
xAuDesignsx
Member
214
02-25-2016, 12:56 AM
#11
Do you mean if I remove something, my chances of recovering it vanish? That sounds like something from the supernatural.
X
xAuDesignsx
02-25-2016, 12:56 AM #11

Do you mean if I remove something, my chances of recovering it vanish? That sounds like something from the supernatural.

K
kjh1
Junior Member
8
02-25-2016, 01:35 AM
#12
You should probably format your USB drive if you encounter issues setting it up.
K
kjh1
02-25-2016, 01:35 AM #12

You should probably format your USB drive if you encounter issues setting it up.

F
Flo541
Junior Member
10
02-29-2016, 01:47 PM
#13
Prepare the USB stick for use. You might also consider formatting it as FAT32 to test the results.
F
Flo541
02-29-2016, 01:47 PM #13

Prepare the USB stick for use. You might also consider formatting it as FAT32 to test the results.

R
Riana711
Member
67
02-29-2016, 03:14 PM
#14
It's not that simple for those who aren't familiar, no pressure. Yeah, I realized you could return to your original system just like before Windows 10. /s
R
Riana711
02-29-2016, 03:14 PM #14

It's not that simple for those who aren't familiar, no pressure. Yeah, I realized you could return to your original system just like before Windows 10. /s

R
Ruubiee17
Senior Member
572
02-29-2016, 11:24 PM
#15
Discuss how to set up a USB flash drive as a Windows 7 installation medium.
R
Ruubiee17
02-29-2016, 11:24 PM #15

Discuss how to set up a USB flash drive as a Windows 7 installation medium.

1
111carys111
Posting Freak
832
03-04-2016, 08:50 PM
#16
functioned properly with a 3.5GB card.
1
111carys111
03-04-2016, 08:50 PM #16

functioned properly with a 3.5GB card.

C
clay__
Member
159
03-06-2016, 09:03 PM
#17
It’s important to remember that whenever you make any kind of upgrade, you must always keep a full backup of all crucial files, documents, and settings. Ideally, store them as a disk image so you can simply restore them onto the HDD later. Upgrades might not go as planned, and even rollback attempts can fail, potentially resulting in data loss. Always maintain backups.
C
clay__
03-06-2016, 09:03 PM #17

It’s important to remember that whenever you make any kind of upgrade, you must always keep a full backup of all crucial files, documents, and settings. Ideally, store them as a disk image so you can simply restore them onto the HDD later. Upgrades might not go as planned, and even rollback attempts can fail, potentially resulting in data loss. Always maintain backups.

B
Bring_It
Senior Member
423
03-07-2016, 12:29 AM
#18
During the Windows 10 upgrade, it provides everything you need. You don<|pad|> a space won’t be an issue.
B
Bring_It
03-07-2016, 12:29 AM #18

During the Windows 10 upgrade, it provides everything you need. You don<|pad|> a space won’t be an issue.

T
trickster224
Junior Member
37
03-07-2016, 06:18 AM
#19
I didn’t have anything practical to support, so it was just benchmarking tools and games I used for testing. That’s why I chose a fresh setup.
T
trickster224
03-07-2016, 06:18 AM #19

I didn’t have anything practical to support, so it was just benchmarking tools and games I used for testing. That’s why I chose a fresh setup.

B
BuloloKO
Member
69
03-07-2016, 03:17 PM
#20
Windows is backing it up on the same HDD , which means, it isn't backing it up . Also, the backup process can fail. The rollback process can fail, corrupting the backup. If you cannot afford to buy an external HDD or large USB stick to do backups (Or hell, even cloud backups to Google Drive or OneDrive), then you really can't afford to use a computer - unless of course you never ever store any important information on your PC that you can't afford to lose. I'm not trying to be an ass, arrogant, or a dick. But seriously, backing up your PC is the single most important thing a user can do, if they store any important data on their PC. If you can't afford to buy an external HDD, then I highly recommend saving up, and buying one ASAP. What are you gonna do if your HDD/SSD dies on you, or you get a virus that fucks your system, or a bad Update corrupts the OS? Yeah I wasn't referring to you If you don't care about losing anything, then there's no risk.
B
BuloloKO
03-07-2016, 03:17 PM #20

Windows is backing it up on the same HDD , which means, it isn't backing it up . Also, the backup process can fail. The rollback process can fail, corrupting the backup. If you cannot afford to buy an external HDD or large USB stick to do backups (Or hell, even cloud backups to Google Drive or OneDrive), then you really can't afford to use a computer - unless of course you never ever store any important information on your PC that you can't afford to lose. I'm not trying to be an ass, arrogant, or a dick. But seriously, backing up your PC is the single most important thing a user can do, if they store any important data on their PC. If you can't afford to buy an external HDD, then I highly recommend saving up, and buying one ASAP. What are you gonna do if your HDD/SSD dies on you, or you get a virus that fucks your system, or a bad Update corrupts the OS? Yeah I wasn't referring to you If you don't care about losing anything, then there's no risk.

Pages (3): Previous 1 2 3 Next