I have my external USB drive with me. It is normally what I use for
backup.
Will spend some time locating fresh editions of the Panasonic USB
drivers I use, in case those are problematical on the c drive just now.
i could not possibly find enough zip drives to do the job, my drives are
qu
Based on your error messages, it sounds like there is a problem with the
hard drive. If you have more than 1 physical hard drive, your best bet
is to copy your data from the c: drive to the e: drive ASAP. If the
"drives" are actually partitions of the same physical drive, I would
copy the dat
No problem if you know the full path and file name. If you have ATTRIB you can
hit it with -H to make it visible.
https://www.computerhope.com/attribhl.htm
On Saturday, December 2, 2017, 11:56:07 AM MST, Karen Lewellen
wrote:
Hi folks,
its complicated. However, is there a way to copy
Hi,
will try to make this more understandable.
I am hunting a new apartment in Toronto, with all or my major computer
stuff in storage save this main one. I.I am staying with friends as expressed.
Still when I arrived I did not open the case to make sure no connectors
came loose.
I did make
On Sat, Dec 2, 2017 at 3:55 PM, Karen Lewellen wrote:
> Thanks to you Dennis, and john for this suggestion.
> The thing is that the file is command.com
You should have mentioned that earlier. What is the problem you are
encountering that requires you to overwrite it?
> I noticed at the computer
Thanks to you Dennis, and john for this suggestion.
The thing is that the file is command.com
I noticed at the computer help source indicates that there is a system
atrib option as well. granted I will check the options with my edition
of atrib, still it might work I have more than one hard d
use attrib to unhide it? then copy?
John
On 12/02/2017 10:38 AM, Karen Lewellen wrote:
Hi folks,
its complicated. However, is there a way to copy over a file that is
technically hidden?
having
a bit of a computer crisis.
thanks,
Kare
"No one is born hating another person because of the co
On Sat, Dec 2, 2017 at 1:38 PM, Karen Lewellen wrote:
> Hi folks,
> its complicated. However, is there a way to copy over a file that is
> technically hidden?
> having a bit of a computer crisis.
DOS recognizes four file attributes: archive, read-only, hidden, and
system. The ATTRIB command sh
Hi folks,
its complicated. However, is there a way to copy over a file that is
technically hidden?
having
a bit of a computer crisis.
thanks,
Kare
"No one is born hating another person because of the color of his
skin or his background or his religion ... People must learn to
hate, and if th