Hi,

Why don't you place your harddrive in another computer as a second harddisk?
Then you could burn your data on a CD-R (if the computer has a CDwriter in
it).

Just make sure the Bios does see the new harddrive on boot*.
(*Automatic search for new harddrives or someting)



Remon



-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: John Blackmore <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Aan: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Datum: maandag 7 augustus 2000 6:56
Onderwerp: reading FAT32


>Hi all,
>
>This is my first post, please bare with me! I tried to upgrade Win98 to
>Win2K this weekend and the end result was 'Missing Operating System' error
>at bootup. Nice, eh? Then the install disk couldn't even recognize my
>drives. I tried installing NT and recognized the drives, but couldn't read
>them. That was my cue to install something a little more predictable, like
>RedHat 6.1.
>
>I installed RH6.1 on what used to be the C: drive, after I wiped the MBR
>with 'fdisk /mbr'. I'd like to get at the data on my D:, E:, and F: drives,
>that should have been left intact. I've tried using 'auto' for the fstype
in
>fstab with no luck. I've also tried...
>
>mount -t vfat /dev/hda5 /d
>
>without success. I get an error like 'invalid fs type option, or ...'
>basically a list of things that could be wrong without narrowing it down.
>I'm guessing there's at least a chance that my drive is corrupted, but I'd
>like to make one more attempt at rescuing the data. Any ideas?
>
>-John
>
>
>
>
>_______________________________________________
>Redhat-list mailing list
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list
>



_______________________________________________
Redhat-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list

Reply via email to