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Main » 2010»Oktober»14 » Windows 7 Recovery System Disc x32 and x64 (Update 11.10.2010)
10:24 AM
Windows 7 Recovery System Disc x32 and x64 (Update 11.10.2010)
Windows 7 Recovery System Disc x32 and x64 (Update 11.10.2010) | 142 MB + 164 MB
This
is where Recovery Disk come into play. It is recommended that users
create a recovery disk as soon as possible and keep it in a safe
location. In case your Windows 7 fails to boot, the recovery disk can
help fix the problem.
If you're like
most PC users, you probably got Windows 7 with a new PC or laptop. And
if you're like 99% of the population, you get your new machines from one
of the major manufacturers. Dell, Acer, HP, Toshiba, Lenovo; who all
have one thing in common: they don't give you a real Windows 7
installation disc with your purchase. Instead, they bundle what they
call a "recovery disc" (that's if you're lucky - otherwise you'll have a
recovery partition instead) with your machine and leave it at that.
It
doesn't matter that you just paid a thousand dollars for a machine that
comes with a valid Windows 7 license - your computer manufacturer just
don't want to spend the money (or perhaps take on the responsibility) of
giving you a Windows 7 installation DVD to accompany your expensive
purchase.
The problem is, with Windows 7, the installation media
serves more than one purpose. It's not just a way to get Windows
installed, it's also the only way of recovering a borked installation.
The Windows 7 DVD has a complete "recovery center" that provides you
with the option of recovering your system via automated recovery
(searches for problems and attempts to fix them automatically),
rolling-back to a system restore point, recovering a full PC backup, or
accessing a command-line recovery console for advanced recovery
purposes.
Thankfully, Microsoft seems to have realized this
problem, and have thankfully made a recovery disc for this purpose. It
contains the contents of the Windows 7 DVD's "recovery center," as we've
come to refer to it. It cannot be used to install or reinstall Windows
7, and just serves as a Windows PE interface to recovering your PC.
Technically, one could re-create this installation media with
freely-downloadable media from Microsoft (namely the Microsoft WAIK kit,
a multi-gigabyte download); but it's damn-decent of Microsoft to make
this available to Windows' users who might not be capable of creating
such a thing on their own. You can make your own copy from Windows 7
Ultimate Edition, but now you have an easier alternative.
It's a
143 MB download (165 MiB for the 64-bit version), and in the standard
ISO format, ready to burned directly to a CD or DVD. Don't wait until
your PC crashes to download a copy! Download and burn your recovery disc
today, so that when the time comes, you'll be ready!
What it
does: The Windows 7 Recovery Disc can be used to access a system
recovery menu, giving you options of using System Restore, Complete PC
Backup, automated system repair, and a command-line prompt for manual
advanced recovery.
What it doesn't do: You cannot use the Windows 7 Recovery Disc to re-install Windows - it only fixes (not replaces!) Windows.