I hate it when that happens: my ~2-year-old Dell XPS 8400 died last night. Hard drive failure. Two hours on the phone with Dell support later, a replacement hard drive will be in my driveway a week from tomorrow (it would have been 1 - 2 business days, but it's a special order since apparently the 8400 is now an antique etc.).
I'd be in big trouble if I weren't routinely using a mix of Groove, Notes, and FolderShare to back up/sync files. It's still a bit of an inconvenience, as I'll have to reinstall apps etc., but not a nightmare.
Weirdly, the 2-year warranty on the 8400 ends in ~2 weeks -- usually hardware waits until ~2 weeks after the warranty expires to die, in my experience... Also weirdly, Dell called last night to offer a warranty extension on the 8400, but I declined, pointing out that I could upgrade to a new CPU for ~twice what they proposed to charge me for 2 more years full coverage on the older PC.
So on 1/26 I will have a new hard disk and a fresh installation of Windows XP on the two-year-old Dell -- just in time to upgrade to Vista...
Link to Error Message: STOP 0x000000D1 DRIVER_IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL
Hope you received your new hard drive....Dell is so bad... I have been waiting for 2 months for mine and when I don't receive the e mail confirmation I know they just stalled me again...My warranty runs out tomorrow...
ReplyDeleteSorry to read that. My drive nightmare was ultimately resolved -- Dell didn't try to stiff me after the warranty period expired for my Dimension PC. The software part of the equation wasn't so successful, but I upgraded to Vista anyway so it wasn't a crisis.
ReplyDeleteOne day my friend had disagreeable condition which finished successfully. But I got into a scrape some days before and didn't know anything. To my good fortune I by chance could resolve my problem by means of one program. It astonished me much and I think it is worthy to be one of probably solutions for this problem - how to read an ost file.
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