So, my computer went kablooie on the weekend. Long story short, my CD drive stopped reading as a valid drive and kept getting corrupted somehow (the computer store guy said something about the CD burner software).
Anyway, I reinstalled Windows XP Pro and reformatted my computer and now everything is working fine. I couldn't find all of my recovery disks and so I used my mom's Dell XP Pro installation CD. Problem is, the activation required doesn't work with my comp because it's already recognized on hers. How do I get around this activation? Is it going to make my OS stop working? Or will the only repercussion be that I can't download certain Microsoft programs (like Anti-Spyware as a I already discovered)?
Ouch! If it was just the software and driver for your CD, you didn't need to reinstall your OS - just the drivers/cd software. If your computer is still in warranty, you should be able to go to your vendor and get replacement disks.
Activation - Your mom's computer has a single user license that's registered in her name. Sure you physically
could install it on your computer but you'll have problems whenever you want to add hardware, get updates, etc. Microsoft has a validation process that checks to see if you paid for your copy and a single user license will only work for the original user/computer.
Another question, about partitioning. When I was reformatting, I saw I had 2 partitions (my OS came already installed, so this is the first I've seen of it), and I have no idea how to make partitions bigger, smaller, delete them, use them, etc. The smaller of the two was about 4gigs, and then the main was the rest.
What is it for? What's the best config to make it all run smoothly? Someone at work mentioned installing the OS on the smaller one, and then keeping all your main stuff on the big one, so if you have to reinstall, you don't lose all your stuff (seeing as, you know, my CD drive was corrupt).
Thanks in advance for reading this rambling post that may not make any sense at all!
I recommend that you don't mess around with your partitions. You could make your computer non functional. You need certain kinds of software and drivers to create a computer configuration from scratch. If you have some friends who experienced in computer builds, consult with them.
I don't recommend that you practice on your primary computer until you get the hang of computer builds. However, if you have a victim computer to practice on, go head on. Learn what you can. :-) You could probably find someone's old computer to practice on. LOL - building computers is FUN! and when the hardware gets outdated, you can recycle them and make those old 32MB RLL drives (6"x4"x10") into conversational piece doorstops! Yea... one of these days I'll get rid of them... but I'm rather fond of my dinosaurs...