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Boot Xp Via Usb Drive

Boot Xp Via Usb Drive
Friday, Dec 7, 2007

Boot Xp Via Usb Drive

Windows XP Home Edition USB alias Portable

Ever want to boot up into Windows XP via a USB memory key? Well, now you can. This is a miniature version of Win XP Just enough to get your up and running so you can restore from backup, access your files, or do whatever you have to do. Also go to your BIOS setting and change the BOOT sequence. Removable drive or something should be at the top then try to reboot your PC. Installation guidance: start “LiveXP.bat” it starts a Installationsscript, in which data must be given the SOURCE path (INSTADLLDIR) and the goal drive assembly. After a few minutes the stick is then finished.

Recover Datas From Damaged CD, DVD

Recover Datas From Damaged CD, DVD


CD Recovery Toolbox tool was developed for recovering damaged files from different disk types: CD, DVD, HD DVD, Blu-Ray, etc. You can use it to restore information lost as a result of some mechanical damage of the disk (scratches, chips, different spots on the surface) or as a result of incorrect recording. Thus, the program can recover data that was considered lost. The CD Recovery Toolbox Free tool scans any CD and DVD disks and finds files and folders located there. We should mention that there can be some information on the disk that cannot be recovered. Not all of the files and folders can be found – that depends on the degree and location of the damage. Therefore, the CD Recovery Toolbox Free tool finds the possible maximum amount of information. After that, it shows a list of all files and folders available for recovery. Now the user can select the files and folders to be recovered. Those specific objects will be recovered while the others will be ignored. The program recovers the maximum amount of information in the damaged file. This reduces the risk of data loss considerably.

CD Recovery Toolbox not only has a complete set of data recovery features, but is also user-friendly and convenient. The program interface is designed as a step-by step wizard, where the user has to perform a single action on each page of the wizard. The wizard makes the use of the tool very simple and convenient even for a beginner.

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How to accelerate your Hardrive speed

How to accelerate your Hardrive speed

Is it possible to accelerate your hard disk drive to speed up file transfer? At first I didn’t know it was possible because thinking that Microsoft might have utilize the best code to have the fastest speed in file copying.

How to speed up file copying

Is it possible to download files better than with non-resumable Internet Explorer? Or defragment a hard-drive faster and more optimal than with Windows’ defrag utility? Is it possible to edit images better than with Windows’ Paint? Or edit text documents better than with Notepad? What about repartitioning hard-drives? Is Windows’ fdisk always up to the task?

Here’s what you need to speed up file copying.

BurstCopy is the hard-drive accelerator that significantly increases file transfer speed. By taking full advantage of the DMA support provided by your hard-drive, and using dynamically adjusted buffers to reduce seek times, BurstCopy will significantly reduce the time you spend waiting for files to transfer.
How to copy file faster


Other than speeding up file transfer speed, it has extra features that Windows should have long ago. If you met any errors during copying files in Windows, the transfer will be terminated. If you’re copying thousands of small files, you know which has been copied and which haven’t. With BurstCopy, any errors that you may typically encounter will not terminate your transfer. A friendly window will inform you of the error, and allow you to choose the appropriate action (skip, retry, abort).

You can also use BurstCopy to pause file transfer process and resume when you’re ready to. It is a known fact that file transfers can slow down other applications that try to use the hard-drive. Using BurstCopy’s pause and resume functions, you can temporarily suspend transfers, while your other programs get exclusive access to the hard-drive. This will for example be useful when you have a long transfer under way, and you need to start a large program. You could just pause the transfer while the program starts, and then resume it.

Another incredible feature that BurstCopy claims to have is it is able to reduce hard disk noise during file transfer. If your hard-drive is typically noisy during file transfers, you will be happy to find out that there is a great reduction in generated noise during BurstCopy transfers. This is a direct result of the methods used to increase the transfer speed and comes at no performance expense.

BurstCopy is truly a gem! We all know how important a hard drive is because we’d loose all our important files if the hard drive fails. Taking care of your hard drive is important!

A small method to hide and secure your folder

Here’s quick and free way to create a secure folder in Windows XP. There is a very nice program called Free Hide Folder from Cleanersoft that allows you to easily hide your private folders.

Your folders are completely hidden and you must supply a password to open the program to unhide the folders. The personal edition is free, just click the Skip Registration button unless you’re using it for commercial purposes.


I’ve tried this program myself and I cannot access the hidden folder via Windows Explorer nor the command prompt. So if the above method is not working, give this a shot!

How to Make Windows Start Up Faster

How to Make Windows Start Up Faster

I don’t know about you, but I love spending the first 10 minutes of every workday watching Windows start up. It’s like a Zen thing. If you’d rather get right to work, though, the following tips should help you make Windows start much more quickly.

Lighten the Load

A typical PC loads a lot of programs every time it starts. Each of the icons in your system tray (the area near your clock) represents an auto-start application. And there are probably other programs on your machine that start automatically but don’t make their presence known so easily. Each autoloading app slows your boot time–a little or a lot. And because most of them continue to run in the background, they rob you of a little performance.

Before you start eliminating autoloaders, though, make sure you can undo your changes. In Windows XP, Select Start, All Programs, Accessories, System Tools, System Restore. Select Create a restore point, click Next, call your restore point something like before removing autoloaders, and choose Create. Click Close once you’ve created the restore point.

In Windows Vista, select Start, Control Panel, System. Under ‘Tasks’ on the right side of the window, click System Protection. In the System Properties box that comes up, click Create at the bottom of the window.

XP users should now select Start, Run, type msconfig, and press . (In Vista, select Start, type msconfig.) Click the Startup tab, and you’ll see a list of all your autoloading programs, each with a check box. Uncheck an item, and it will no longer load at startup. into the Search box, and press

Choose Your Autoloading Apps

Which applications should you leave checked so that they continue to autoload? First and foremost, you don’t want to operate without your antivirus, firewall, and other security programs. Yes, these programs slow your PC’s boot-up and shutdown, and they can even cause conflicts, but the cost of not having them running is too high to bear.

For any other program in the list, use your judgment. Don’t ask yourself “Is it a good program?” but “Does it need to be on all the time?” For instance, I unchecked Adobe Elements’ Photo Downloader, a program that I use whenever I download photos from my camera, because it serves no purpose when I’m not downloading photos. On the other hand, I allow Copernic Desktop Search to autoload because it needs to index my data files continually.

After unchecking the programs that you don’t need to autoload at startup, click OK and reboot. Windows will load with a very wordy message box that might look like an error message. Just check Don’t show this message or launch the System Configuration Utility when Windows starts (the wording is slightly different in Vista) at the bottom of the dialog box and click OK.

Windows Dusting and Cleaning

If an autoloader diet doesn’t sufficiently accelerate your boot-up, try these tweaks:

Clean out the Registry. The larger your Windows Registry, the longer the OS will take to boot. My favorite Registry cleaner is ChemTable’s $30 Reg Organizer, which is both a powerful Registry editor and a general Windows maintenance tool. If you don’t want to pay to put things in order, try the less-powerful EasyCleaner from ToniArts.

Use fewer fonts. Loading hundreds of system fonts takes time. If you have more than 500 fonts on your PC, remove a few. Sue Fisher’s free The Font Thing utility will help you whittle your font selection down to size.

Add RAM. Faster hardware means faster boots (and shutdowns, and everything in between). There’s no cheaper, more effective way to improve your hardware’s performance than by adding RAM. See our video tip, “How to Upgrade Your RAM” for step-by-step instructions.

How to disable the warning message in Windows Vista Remote Desktop Connection

When you connect to a machine running Windows 2000 or Windows Server 2003 from Windows Vista RDP, you may have noticed the following warning:

“Remote Desktop cannot verify the identity of the computer you want to connect to.”

This is good, but it’s rather annoying to be notified each time you want to connect to a server! To turn off the warning,
- Open the Remote Desktop Connection application and click Options.
- On the Advanced tab, select the option Always connect, even if authentication fails.

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