Hi folks, I'm an XP newbie...be gentle 
After spending two long evenings loading stuff onto my new Toshiba S155 laptop with XP Home, I installed a program that finished with the usual recommendation to shutdown and reboot. After doing so, the OS refused to boot...not even a splash screen.
All I could get was a system error message saying that one of the configuration files in the system32 folder was corrupted. The only recourse offered was to totally reinstall the operating system from the "recovery" CD's which of course took me back to square one and forced me to reinstall all of the software I had spent so much time installing...which I have patiently done, starting with the program that crashed it in the first place to make sure it didn't happen again.
Is there any way to create a recovery disk that will let you boot into NTFS and tinker with errant files without having to reinstall everything? The laptop has no floppy and no serial port (a major design flaw if I ever saw one...) so it would need to be a bootable CD.
algraff :
After spending two long evenings loading stuff onto my new Toshiba S155 laptop with XP Home, I installed a program that finished with the usual recommendation to shutdown and reboot. After doing so, the OS refused to boot...not even a splash screen.
![[sadeyes] [sadeyes] [sadeyes]](/data/assets/smilies/sadeyes.gif)
Is there any way to create a recovery disk that will let you boot into NTFS and tinker with errant files without having to reinstall everything? The laptop has no floppy and no serial port (a major design flaw if I ever saw one...) so it would need to be a bootable CD.
algraff :