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<blockquote data-quote="CyberSimian" data-source="post: 1301840" data-attributes="member: 141969"><p>I would strongly urge you to get into the habit of creating drive images of your "C:" drive (the one that contains MP). That way, if you make a change that is catastrophic and not easily reversed, you can simply restore your most-recent drive image.</p><p></p><p>There are several free or low-cost tools for creating drive images, and you will need an external USB disk that is big enough to contain several drive images. The "C:" drive contains much data that is binary, and which does not compress, so an estimate of the size of a drive image would be the current space used on the "C:" drive. Some imaging tools omit the Windows page file, swap file, and hibernation file, and this significantly reduces the size of the drive image.</p><p></p><p>-- from CyberSimian in the UK</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CyberSimian, post: 1301840, member: 141969"] I would strongly urge you to get into the habit of creating drive images of your "C:" drive (the one that contains MP). That way, if you make a change that is catastrophic and not easily reversed, you can simply restore your most-recent drive image. There are several free or low-cost tools for creating drive images, and you will need an external USB disk that is big enough to contain several drive images. The "C:" drive contains much data that is binary, and which does not compress, so an estimate of the size of a drive image would be the current space used on the "C:" drive. Some imaging tools omit the Windows page file, swap file, and hibernation file, and this significantly reduces the size of the drive image. -- from CyberSimian in the UK [/QUOTE]
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