Citrix XenApp

Your Journey towards cloud.

Virtualization Picking up Speed

Are your Skills keeping up? Skill up. Be Relevant

Are you a System Admin

Learn Citrix XenApp, Its future.

Citrix XenApp

Industry-leading virtualization platform for building cloud.

Cloud Computing in Demand

Learn how to build cloud on Citrix XenApp.

Showing posts with label System Rescue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label System Rescue. Show all posts

Tuesday, 1 November 2011

Change The Storage Location Of 'My Documents'

Normally windows saves the "My Documents" folder on your C-drive. 
But when you right-click on it and go to properties, you can change the location where you want windows to save your Documents folder.
 
I have a partition set up with just windows on it, and all my things i want to keep are on different partitions/disks. 
So now I put My Documents on another partition than where I have windows installed. 
If windows screws up and you have to format your C-drive again, your documents will be spared at least...

Thursday, 1 September 2011

Manual virus removal from 'System Volume information'

In Windows,  System Volume Information is a system folder, to keep track of the changes took placed on a partition in a fix time period. This folder exists in every partition on your HDD. By default this folder is hidden, but you can see it by showing the hidden and system files and folders.The information stored in these folders helps Windows to revert to an earlier state, when you use the System Restore tool.


But sometimes, some malware files get in the System Volume Information folder. This can happens by any of following reasons:

  1.  the malware wants to get there so that user doesn't have access to delete it and from where it can restore itself, 
  2. or some malware file gets deleted and Windows decides that the file was important and it automatically stores it there, in case you ever want it back.
Well, you can easily clean malware infection from this folder by using the following simple steps:





  • Right click on My Computer, then go to Properties
  • Now in Windows XP:  Go to System Restore tabenable the option Disable System Restore on all drives and click Apply. This should erase all System Restore Points, including the infected file(s).
  • In Windows 7: Go to System Protection > then under protection settings choose hard drive that have malware and click Configure > Turn off system Protection > ok
  • After this, again enable the system Restore option and press Apply again, so that you'll re-enable System Restore.