laodai
01-28-2009, 12:52 AM
[center]Reinstall Windows XP
không phải xóa đi những hardware/software setting trong máy
Non destructive to Hardware And Sofware Settings WinXP Total Rebuild
(only windows XP is being reinstall)
1. Boot PC to your XP setup CD để thực hiện the no-reformat reinstall option.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_01.jpg
2. Let the CD boot proceed normally and automatically through "Setup is inspecting your computer's hardware..."to the "Windows Setup" screen.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_02.jpg
3. The "Starting Windows" screen is a bit of an overstatement; it's just the setup process getting going.
Windows, as we normally think of it, isn't running yet, and no changes have been made to your PC.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_03.jpg
4. The poorly worded options in Screen Four lead many users astray. The only mention of "Repair" here is "...repair a Windows XP installation using Recovery Console..." but that's not the no-reformat repair/reinstall we're seeking. (The Recovery Console Repair option is useful in its own right for fixing relatively minor problems with the operating system, and we fully explore it in a separate Langalist article.)
**** **** ****The repair option we do want--a nondestructive, no-reformat reinstall--is actually hidden beneath the Setup option, "To set up Windows XP now, press ENTER."**** **** **** ****
So hit Enter, just as if you were setting up a freshWindows and from scratch.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_04.jpg
5. The licensing screen gives no indication that this is a Repair and not a brand-new, from-scratch installation. But don't be alarmed. You're on the right track.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_05.jpg
6. Our intent is to repair the same version of Windows as is on the setup CD, but another poorly worded screen makes it seem like you're upgrading a previous version of Windows or installing one a new. But don't let the bad wording alarm you; we're still on track for a nondestructive reinstall.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_06.jpg
7. At long last, Setup begins to refer to a Repair option. Here, Setup should have found your damaged XP setup, which you can select and then press R to start the nondestructive repair.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_07.jpg
8. The Repair operation replaces all potentially damaged system files with a fresh copies from the CD.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_08.jpg
9. There's no fanfare, but this is one of the nicer parts of the Repair process:
Setup retains what it can in the current Registry so that already-installed hardware and software will remain installed.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_09.jpg
10. With the system files freshly copied and the Registry ready for rebuilding, the system needs to reboot. *****Remove the CD***** from the drive so that the PC will boot to the hard drive instead of to the CD.
Note: Boot up time may take a while.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_10.jpg
[
không phải xóa đi những hardware/software setting trong máy
Non destructive to Hardware And Sofware Settings WinXP Total Rebuild
(only windows XP is being reinstall)
1. Boot PC to your XP setup CD để thực hiện the no-reformat reinstall option.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_01.jpg
2. Let the CD boot proceed normally and automatically through "Setup is inspecting your computer's hardware..."to the "Windows Setup" screen.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_02.jpg
3. The "Starting Windows" screen is a bit of an overstatement; it's just the setup process getting going.
Windows, as we normally think of it, isn't running yet, and no changes have been made to your PC.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_03.jpg
4. The poorly worded options in Screen Four lead many users astray. The only mention of "Repair" here is "...repair a Windows XP installation using Recovery Console..." but that's not the no-reformat repair/reinstall we're seeking. (The Recovery Console Repair option is useful in its own right for fixing relatively minor problems with the operating system, and we fully explore it in a separate Langalist article.)
**** **** ****The repair option we do want--a nondestructive, no-reformat reinstall--is actually hidden beneath the Setup option, "To set up Windows XP now, press ENTER."**** **** **** ****
So hit Enter, just as if you were setting up a freshWindows and from scratch.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_04.jpg
5. The licensing screen gives no indication that this is a Repair and not a brand-new, from-scratch installation. But don't be alarmed. You're on the right track.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_05.jpg
6. Our intent is to repair the same version of Windows as is on the setup CD, but another poorly worded screen makes it seem like you're upgrading a previous version of Windows or installing one a new. But don't let the bad wording alarm you; we're still on track for a nondestructive reinstall.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_06.jpg
7. At long last, Setup begins to refer to a Repair option. Here, Setup should have found your damaged XP setup, which you can select and then press R to start the nondestructive repair.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_07.jpg
8. The Repair operation replaces all potentially damaged system files with a fresh copies from the CD.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_08.jpg
9. There's no fanfare, but this is one of the nicer parts of the Repair process:
Setup retains what it can in the current Registry so that already-installed hardware and software will remain installed.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_09.jpg
10. With the system files freshly copied and the Registry ready for rebuilding, the system needs to reboot. *****Remove the CD***** from the drive so that the PC will boot to the hard drive instead of to the CD.
Note: Boot up time may take a while.
http://i.cmpnet.com/infoweek/1094/langa_10.jpg
[