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My current set up involves my old hard drive with Windows XP Pro in an enclosure, hooked up to my mother's laptop, also running XP Pro, via USB.
I wish to boot to my hard drive, so that I may retrieve my Firefox bookmarks. I didn't realize that Firefox didn't store bookmarks in a separate folder until I had already pulled the HD out of the tower it was in.
The laptop didn't want to boot to the enclosure, so I tried putting the Windows disk that came with my original desktop in, booting to that, and running a repair.
First of all, it called the enclosure drive D:/ instead of F:/, which is what the lappy calls it when I boot up normally. That was confusing.
I told it to repaid D:/, and it just sort of sat there at a DOS prompt looking at me funny.
What the hell do I have to do in order to boot to my HD? HALP!
I wish to boot to my hard drive, so that I may retrieve my Firefox bookmarks. I didn't realize that Firefox didn't store bookmarks in a separate folder until I had already pulled the HD out of the tower it was in.
The laptop didn't want to boot to the enclosure, so I tried putting the Windows disk that came with my original desktop in, booting to that, and running a repair.
First of all, it called the enclosure drive D:/ instead of F:/, which is what the lappy calls it when I boot up normally. That was confusing.
I told it to repaid D:/, and it just sort of sat there at a DOS prompt looking at me funny.
What the hell do I have to do in order to boot to my HD? HALP!
no subject
Date: 2010-04-24 04:21 pm (UTC)The program on the Windows disc that is serving to do the repair attempt will look at the drives in logical order. By default and as a rule for PCs, primary hard drives will always be assigned as the C drive. Every following drive will be assigned in order, D and so on. It's nothing to take note of (in this case), your mother's laptop just has your hard disk assigned as F in it's own registry.
If none of this works, shoot me a message on Facebook, I'll see what else I can dig up. I would also like to suggest an add-on for Firefox called Xmarks. It syncs your bookmarks securely to their server, letting you sync them across multiple computers. Even if you only use a single machine, if that machine crashes, you haven't lost your bookmarks. You can also view your bookmarks through their web interface if you are at work for example.
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2010-04-24 05:30 pm (UTC)http://support.mozilla.com/en-US/kb/Profiles
For info on where it's stored... ususally....
(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2010-04-24 05:59 pm (UTC)