• On GameFAQs: The top 100 most popular games!

About CNET TV

CNET TV is where you get your video fix on the coolest gadgets, the latest gear, and up-to-the-minute tech reviews and news. And the CNET TV blog provides you a behind-the-scenes look at our shows, personalities, and even upcoming site features.

Add this feed to your online news reader

  • prev
  • 1
  • next
Read all 'disaster' posts in CNET TV
September 5, 2008 4:27 PM PDT

Make your own PC rescue disk

by Tom Merritt
  • 1 comment

One of the worst feelings in the world is a computer that won't boot up. How can you fix a problem if you can't even access the hard drive? A good preventative measure is to create a rescue disk for your computer. Watch our video then head back here for the steps.

Your computer may boot up into a safe or recovery mode all on its own--which is great--but if the power's fine and the dang thing just won't boot, you need a rescue disk. If you still have Windows or Mac OS X, your install disk acts as a recovery disc. Or you may have a special recovery disk from the manufacturer.

Put your system or recovery disk in the CD-drive and then boot from CD (we have a separate Quick Tip that shows you how to do that). It should take you to some sort of recovery screen that gives you limited access to the computer.

Depending on the problem, that may be all you need. However, what if you've lost your install disk? Or, as is sometimes the case with Windows rescue disks, what if the recovery program you have won't let you copy files or edit text. We have some help for you. Bootable Linux CDs, like Knoppix here, to the rescue!

I should note that Knoppix has trouble reading the Windows file system called NTFS. It's fine with the FAT32 system. For NTFS users, try Bart's Preinstalled Environment. First, download the ISO file of the bootable Linux of your choice. I'm going with Knoppix from Knoppix.net.

Next, burn the ISO image to a blank disc. We have a Quick Tip on how to do that, too. Then boot from the Linux CD. Now you should have access to your hard drives and all the data on them.

Let's say you want to recover data off the hard drive.

First, right click on the drive and choose mount.

Right click on the drive, choose actions and change read/write. Say, "Yes, you want to make the disk writable."

Now you can plug in an external drive, like a thumbdrive. Make it writable as well, just the way you did for the hard drive. Then drag files across to save them.

Or, let's say you've tracked down the problem to a corrupted file.

Go to the big K, choose editors, and open a text editor like KWrite. Choose file: open select device, find your hard drive, probably called hda1 and browse to the file you wish to edit. Having set the read/write parameters earlier, you can now edit the file and save it back.

When you're done, shut down the computer and pull out the CD. Now you can try rebooting from the hard drive to see if your fix worked.

That's the most basic way to do this. Once you get the hang of Knoppix, you can make a more customized CD or even a rescue thumbdrive.

August 23, 2007 1:56 PM PDT

CNET Live - Episode 20 - Show Notes

by Tom Merritt
  • 1 comment
Today was a disaster for me. Our call screening software kept giving me a run-time error. I fixed that when I uninstalled the Comodo firewall, but then Google Earth didn't work. So I reinstalled Google Earth and the the call-screening software gave me a runtime error. So that's when I started a system restore. That didn't fix the call screening software, but then I lost Web access. So I did another system restore with two minutes until show time. That's the one you saw on the air. Then I got everything but call screening working and Google earth stopped working. So I reinstalled Google Earth and of course I lost network connectivity, so Google Earth froze on the air. Then I started another system restore to end the show.

Thankfully Brian had more luck. He got to leave the building and look at the Samrt Car. Watch the show soon on CNET TV.

Things we Crave

Nokia 6555

Revo Wi-Fi Radio

Digibarn

I had the distinct pleasure of touring the digibarn home to almost every computer in history.

Tour the Digibarn

Take a look at the Smart Car.

Download of the Week

Google Earth with Google Sky.

First Look

Motorola Q9.

Best of the Web

Zoho.

Your calls

Run boot camp on an external hard drive.

  • prev
  • 1
  • next
advertisement
Click Here
CNET TV Twitter Feeds

CNET TV topics

CNET TV bloggers

Brian Cooley
Molly Wood
Tom Merritt
Justin Eckhouse
Brian Tong

Get the CNET TV newsletter

Would you like a wrap-up of the week's hottest CNET TV videos delivered directly to your in-box? Then sign up for the weekly CNET TV newsletter, delivered every Friday.
Subscribe now!