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Two days ago, I was in my home office working on my degree work for the week. Just as I finish writing up a seminar, I stretch my legs, kicking out the all important power cable at the back of my machine. It's not the first time I've done it, so I was annoyed at potentially losing what I had been working on but not particularly fussed.
I restarted the machine and with an element of surprise, the POST took a while longer than per usual and it stopped, not before asking me to insert boot media. At this point, I thought the master boot record used to boot up Windows was corrupted. No big deal, but the Windows 7 disk I needed was in my office on campus - over a mile away, and this was 11pm.
So I trail my way up to campus and get the almighty powerful disk I thought needed to fix my master boot record. Instead of trailing all the way back home, I decided to pull an all-nighter and get some work done. To say that I felt a little delicate the next day would have been a massive understatement.
Once I finally got home, I slam the disk in and with a little persuasion begin Windows setup to recover the drive. After a while it dawned on me that not only can Windows setup not find my drive but neither can BIOS. At this point I realise that I am in deep trouble.
With a spare tower box at my disposal, I unplug the drive and install it into the other machine, swap SATA leads, install it while Windows is running on the other machine - you name it, the combinations were countless.
At this point, it is keen to stress the importance and value of Twitter and my colleagues. With the help of the aptly name @the_pc_doc, our very own Adrian Kingsley-Hughes and a long-time friend, Robert Gale, with Twitter handle @awv named after his very popular "A Welsh View" blog, I was able to troubleshoot these issues in real time. (For those interested: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15)
Through no will of trying, I have now come to a sound, unfortunate conclusion, that my hard drive is well and truly screwed. My data is fully intact but I have absolutely no way of accessing it. And did I back up my machine? Of course I did - but on a separate partition, and on that hard drive.
There are little bits and bobs floating around on my laptop, my office computer, my university network shared drive, and a bunch of flash drives that I have - as well as a "master backup" which I completed a few weeks ago once I upgraded to Windows 7 RTM on a DVD at home, but I cannot really count on those for absolutely everything.
So my wise words for the day - especially university students like me who spend tens of thousands of pounds/dollars on their university education - in large letters for emphasis on an appropriate level:
posted by Zack Whittaker
October 20, 2009 @ 5:43 pm
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