PyR0NiAk wrote:Well, I'm able to make everything LOOK normal by running explorer.exe from a command prompt, but still can't open anything. As far as other profiles, no. A recovery cd... Not an option... My computer no longer has it's cd drive... (long story involving a hotel room) I've pretty much given up on this computer... I found a cheap laptop through best buy that I had sent to my wife and I'm just going to have her send it with a care package. After this, I'm pretty sure I'm just going to setup linux on it.
Did you try my "also, do this" section? Seriously, give that a shot. You computer goes through a resource starvation when you encounter errors of that nature.
Unix and it's many offspring are nice if you:1) Know quite a bit about it2) Run on a dedicated network3) Are running a server
Honestly, for every person you hear say "yea, I run linux at home", only about 10% are actually telling the truth. So many folks at work always complain about Windows and say Linux would be much better, but at the same time dont even know what the /dev directory is for.
For home and personal use, Windows or OSX are your best bets.
I've been running Vista at home for quite some time now, and have no complaints at all. Mind you, this isn't just on one PC, it's four. Sure, you get your normal Microshaft bumps and bruises, but the "nightmare" that is Vista is usually self inflicted. It does help that I'm an Engineer, but my roommate who is easily dumber than the least smart person on this forum (pick and choose from the assortment in 240 gen) has had minimal issues (basically the ones that you're going to get just by owning a computer).
Either way, if you do get a new pc/laptop, your data from your old one is quite easily retrievable. Just slave your old drive off your new platform and pick and prod till you find what you want.