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Old 02-11-2015, 02:33 AM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Frank Booth Frank Booth is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Oct 2013
Posts: 49
Default OT - computer question


"Charlie Pridham" wrote in message
...

"Frank Booth" wrote in message
...

"Charlie Pridham" wrote in message
...
My main machine is playing up, I have ordered a new one but want to

extract
as much old data from the old one as I can. Its a PC running Vista

I have a full back up on an external hard drive. I do not have Vista on

disk
its in a partition on the hard drive. I also have a year old mirror

copy
of
my hard drive but that also is a USB type connection

I am doing this on the machine as it appears in some respects to be

working
normally, but if I connect anything with memory to any of the USB or

card
slots it fails to find it and if I open "Computer" and click on any of
the
external slots it shuts down and reboots so I cant do any further back

ups.

I had thought that as the hard drive was still working I could just

drop
it
into the new machine but I am now suspecting its the Windows coding

that
is
corrupted and I cant restore my back up because it wont read the USB
slots
and "System Restore" doesn't work.

First of all you can't just drop your old hard drive with system into a
new
computer and think it will boot up from that. It won't do simply because
your new machine will use different drivers, require different registry
settings etc Your system backup is only good for your old machine. You
can
add it to your new machine as a second drive and otshould read all the
files
on it, but you won't be able to boot from it without doing a re-install

on
it and altering the boot file on your new drive.

As far as your old machine goes any backup of data can be transferred to
any
machine.So first remove all external memory (cards, drives) reboot your
computer, then stick a flash drive into a USB port (at the back) and see
whether your computer can see that.



No it can't see any USB sticks.

I thought the drivers would be on the hard drive not in the BIOS?

The drivers are software files on your hard drive. I never mentioned the
BIOS. It's possible you have a motherboard failure as your system should
certainly recognise a flashdrive. It could also be a driver problem whereby
Windows generic drivers that recognise PNP USB peripheral devicess have
somehow become corrupted . Before worrying about mobo failure, look up under
the Device Manager (it's under System in the Control Panel),. Look up
'Universal Serial Bus Controllers. Open up the branch and see whether there
are any question marks or warning signs against the USB Host controllers or
USB hub devices. .