My home PC which I use for work fairly often has had a heart attack. I’ll explain.
Originally, I ran Windows 98 on it.
I upgraded to Windows XP some time ago, but due to driver unavailability for my scanner, I reverted back to Windows 98. This was at least a year ago.
Yesterday, I deleted what I thought was erroneous XP files, namely ntldr. Now, my machine says ‘ntldr is missing, reboot’.
So what I want to know is : if my system is expecting this file, is my system using Fat32 or NTFS? I could have sworn that when running WIN 98, it said both my HDD’s use Fat32.
So my question would be, should I download a Windows 98 recovery disk or Windows XP recovery disk, and do a Sys C: on it? And if so, how do I ensure I choose the correct one so that I don’t lose data on the drive!????
Thanks
Chris
Originally, I ran Windows 98 on it.
I upgraded to Windows XP some time ago, but due to driver unavailability for my scanner, I reverted back to Windows 98. This was at least a year ago.
Yesterday, I deleted what I thought was erroneous XP files, namely ntldr. Now, my machine says ‘ntldr is missing, reboot’.
So what I want to know is : if my system is expecting this file, is my system using Fat32 or NTFS? I could have sworn that when running WIN 98, it said both my HDD’s use Fat32.
So my question would be, should I download a Windows 98 recovery disk or Windows XP recovery disk, and do a Sys C: on it? And if so, how do I ensure I choose the correct one so that I don’t lose data on the drive!????
Thanks
Chris