Coffee Shop | Dream Machine ( Build your own PC )


Previous 10 | Next 10 
To: Bruce A. Thompson who wrote (14291)11/21/2003 10:57:35 AM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu   of 14778
 
That is exactly what I did and still it can not read it.

Will experiment over the weekend and will see.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

To: Howard R. Hansen who wrote (14289)11/21/2003 11:00:20 AM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu   of 14778
 
Howard, those are the instruction for instalation under WIN95/98

--------------------------------------------
Adobe Acrobat PDFWriter
Read Me Notes for Windows95 installation.

Purpose: The PDFWRITR.INF file allows you to install the PDFWriter driver into Windows95 following a failed attempt by Acrobat Exchange.

How to Use: An incomplete installation of the PDFWriter into Windows95 will have successfully decompressed the needed PDFWriter files onto your hard drive. Follow the steps below to complete the PDF registration.

1) Restart your Windows95 session and make sure no applications are running.
2) Verify you have the following three files in the WINDOWS\SYSTEM subdirectory.
Note: your Windows directory may have a different name i.e.
WIN95 or WIN: PDFWritr.drv PDFWlib.dll PDFhlp.hlp
If you have all three of the above files copy the PDFWRITR.INF on this disk into
the your WINDOWS\SYSTEM directory.

3) From the Start menu go to Settings\Printers and double click the "Add Printer" icon.
4) From the Add Printer Wizard, click "Next."
5) Then select "Local Printer" and click "Next."
6) Choose "Have Disk." On the next screen click "Browse" and target your system subdirectory in the Windows95 directory. Type PDFWRITR.INF in the file name box and click "OK."
7) An "Install from disk" dialog will come up. Click "OK."
8) The "Acrobat PDFWriter" will appear as the selected printer. Click "Next." Note: Ignore the have disk button
9) Choose "LPT1: Printer Port." Click "Next."
10) Choose if you want the PDFWriter as your default printer and what name you would like to designate for it. The default name is "Acrobat PDFWriter." Click "Next."
11) When the Printer Wizard prompts you to print a test page (the default), Click no. The PDFWriter will appear as a printer in you printer list.

Adobe, Acrobat, is a trademark of Adobe Systems Incorporated which may be registered in certain jurisdictions. © 1984 - 1996 Adobe Systems Incorporated. All rights reserved.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: Louis V. Lambrecht who wrote (14286)11/21/2003 5:45:12 PM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu   of 14778
 
Now I have another great experience - my Quicken directory disapeared - COMPLETELY - Thanks Microsoft now will the IRS believe me?

Any way to recover those data files ?

Qdata.QDF
Qdata.QEL
Qdata.QSD
Qdata.QTX

I think that I performed defrag and scan disk after the dissapearence.

Will recover program help?


Thank you

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (3)

To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (14294)11/21/2003 10:19:49 PM
From: Fargonaut   of 14778
 
I think programs like Quicken make a backup copy of data files, but I'm not sure because I don't use it myself.

Try going to Start, Search, Files or Folders, enter QDATA.* and see what you get.

F

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: Fargonaut who wrote (14295)11/22/2003 3:22:18 AM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu   of 14778
 
I tried that and it does not work. Forgot which letter is erased in the file name. I know that erased files can be found on the HD.

Unfortunate I erased the Norton protected files not knowing that the whole Quicken folder was lost

I have an old Norton System Works but forgot how to operate it

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read

To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (14294)11/22/2003 9:40:25 AM
From: Louis V. Lambrecht   of 14778
 
First thing to do would be to not use that hard drive anymore.
Windows system files, web caches and other goodies could overwrite the lost files.

Immediately contact IRS, panicky behaviour and whining can help, get a paper or a mail dating your problem.

There are some file recovery softwares on the net, some you can try-before-you-buy. Nothing spectular, but usually the demo lists deleted files and the confidence grade of recovery.
Used and bought recover4all once (and only once) was worth the $25.

Means that you must have workgroups installed and do your searches from another netted PC or decrease you chances of recovery if working on your hard drive.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: Louis V. Lambrecht who wrote (14297)11/22/2003 10:47:18 AM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu   of 14778
 
Thanks, I suspected the same. ........and unfortunate I did not pau attention that the "shortcut" to Quicken went "blamk". After ward I defraged the drive under XP .

As to the IRS I think they care less will need to reenter all the data since my backup on a CD Rom back up.

Will try recover4all

Thanks

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (14298)11/22/2003 11:32:48 AM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu   of 14778
 
No luck with recover4all did not find any trace of Quicken files.

Uploaded the CD back up now I must type one year of data.

That waths happened when you scan disk and defrag often I asume

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (14294)11/22/2003 12:12:20 PM
From: Jon Tara   of 14778
 
"Any way to recover those data files?"

Sure.

Just copy them from your offline backup.

Er, you do, uh, have...

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (1)

To: Haim R. Branisteanu who wrote (14299)11/22/2003 12:22:45 PM
From: Jon Tara   of 14778
 
This is what happens when you don't know what you are doing, put two OSs in the same hard drive partition, and get things all jumbled-up.

I can't say I didn't warn you.

Yes, I mean to be harsh. Should serve as a good warning to others.

Don't try this at home, kids!

You are much, much better off, when upgrading from one major OS version to another, to start over on a fresh hard drive, reinstalling all of your software on the new OS. To get your data files over, either copy them to offline media and then copy them (or import, as appropriate for the particular program) to the new system, or mount the old drive on the new system and treat as "read only", copying data files to the new drive.

And I would definately recommend making a backup copy of the drive before starting on ANY major upgrade or reorganization.

Drives are cheap. A lot cheaper than the potential cost of ignoring this advice.

To be fair, dealing with Windows software installation and data organization is as complicated and obtuse as the user interface is easy and transparent. Linux users have it made in this regard. There is no *&^%! registry - programs keeps their settings in data files - often simple human-readable text files. (Weren't .ini files a joy?) Most programs and data can simply be copied from one system or hard drive to another, and will just work, just like in the good old DOS days.

Share Recommend | Keep | Reply | Mark as Last Read | Read Replies (2)
Previous 10 | Next 10 

Copyright © 1995-2013 Knight Sac Media. All rights reserved.