Joshua, or others

Well I just ran a chkdsk on an external hard drive with a
corrupt file or directory and it ran through the first of
three steps just like the internal one did last evening.
However, it did not complete the last two steps as the note
below indicates it will, and it did identify 3 things it
deleted on its first pass. I have not rebooted my computer
this evening as I don't want to tie it up as I need to use
it. But, here is my question. When I reboot later how is
chkdsk going to finish the job like it did with my internal
drive last evening as it is hooked up through a USB port and
I don't believe they become active until Window's boots? I
did try unplugging the drive and reconnecting but still
can't delete that directory/file until the process completes
itself.

thanks Al

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]]on Behalf Of
Joshua
Klander
Sent: Saturday, May 29, 2010 1:18 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Blind-Computing] Deleting corrupt directory


Hello.  If you scan a portable hard drive, the entire
process
will take place when the computer is running.

 ----- Original Message -----
From: "Alan & Terrie Robbins" <[email protected]
To: <[email protected]
Date sent: Sat, 29 May 2010 13:06:22 -0400
Subject: Re: [Blind-Computing] Deleting corrupt directory

Ishe,

One additional question, if I run chkdsk on a portable hard
drive connected through a USB connection, can the entire
process take place while the computer is running or will it
have to reboot and finish? If the later, how does that work
since I don't believe the USB ports are active until after
Windows boots?

thanks
Al

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]]on Behalf Of
Ishe
Chinyoka
Sent: Saturday, May 29, 2010 9:09 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Blind-Computing] Deleting corrupt directory


Glad it worked.

Of course you can choose to do this regularly, but it is not
always
necessary unless you find some corrupt files.
However, for better system performance I recommend this and
a few
housekeeping chores.  I personally schedule such things as
defragmentation,
disk cleanup, backups and of course the disk checking
utility on a monthly
basis.  To let this not interfere with your day to day work,
you can just add
these command line tasks to the Schedule Tasks in the
Control Panel so that
they may take place without your interference in future.

Thanks and and take care,

Ishe
----- Original Message -----
From: "Alan & Terrie Robbins" <[email protected]
To: <[email protected]
Sent: Saturday, May 29, 2010 1:20 PM
Subject: Re: [Blind-Computing] Deleting corrupt directory


 Ishe,

 Thanks, problem resolved.  When I did this last night, it
 said there were 3 parts to the process and the first one
 completed relatively quickly and I did hear something
toward
 the end about deleting something.  It did not finish the
 process until I booted this morning which took quite a
while
 since the G drive where I keep my backups is quite large.
 This was a great tip and I'll keep for future reference .
Is
 it a good maintenance practice to run chkdsk on drives
 occasionally?

 Al

 -----Original Message-----
 From: [email protected]
 [mailto:[email protected]]on Behalf
Of
 Ishe
 Chinyoka
 Sent: Friday, May 28, 2010 4:47 PM
 To: [email protected]
 Subject: Re: [Blind-Computing] Deleting corrupt directory


 The chkdsk utility is found in the system root, so you
 simply open a command
 line and type "chkdsk".
 This is used for checking your disk integrity and
recovering
 lost chains in
 any directory.
>From the message you are receiving, it looks like chkdsk
 could be the
 solution.

 Open Run from the Start menu.
 Type cmd and press Enter.
 When the command prompt appears, simply type chkdsk,
 followed by the path to
 the directory which is corrupted or its drive.
 For example, you can type chkdsk E:documents
 or simply chkdsk E:
 The verbose output will be spoken back by Jaws (or any
 screen reader) so you
 won't be bored by waiting.

 Hope this may work.
 Cheers
 ----- Original Message -----
 From: "Alan & Terrie Robbins" <[email protected]
 To: <[email protected]
 Sent: Friday, May 28, 2010 10:17 PM
 Subject: Re: [Blind-Computing] Deleting corrupt directory


 Ishe,

 Thanks for the site.  I went there and this is the
 description
 "Ever had such an annoying message given by Windows:
 Cannot
 delete file: Access is denied.  There has been a sharing
 violation.  The source or destination file may be in use
or
 the file is in use by another program or user.  Make sure
 the
 disk is not full or write-protected and that the file is
 not
 currently in use.  Unlocker is the solution.  Unlocker is
an
 Explorer extension that allows you with a simple
 right-click
 of the mouse on a file or folder to get rid of error
 message
 such as error deleting file or folder, cannot delete
 folder:
 it is used by another person or program."

 Although this sounds like a useful tool in some
situations
 I
 believe my situation may be different? Here's the message
 I'm getting:
 Error Deleting File or Folder
 Cannot delete Shoe #25.xls: The file or directory is
 corrupted and unreadable.
 OK "

 Any suggestions on how to deal with this? Your other
 suggestion of running chkdsk on the directory or file
 sounds
 good but I don't see an option to do that.  What would the
 command line in the run dialogue box look like to execute
 that task?

 thanks in advance
 Al





 -----Original Message-----
 From: [email protected]
 [mailto:[email protected]]on Behalf
 Of
 Ishe
 Chinyoka
 Sent: Friday, May 28, 2010 3:55 PM
 To: [email protected]
 Subject: Re: [Blind-Computing] Deleting corrupt directory


 Hi Mike and friends

 You can download Unlocker Assistant here:


http://download.cnet.com/Unlocker/3000-2248_4-10493998.html

 Basically it helps to eliminate those Windows annoying
 messages like "Access
 is denied" or phrasing to that effect.

 Take care,

 Ishe
 ----- Original Message -----
 From: "Mike & Barbara" <[email protected]
 To: <[email protected]
 Sent: Friday, May 28, 2010 8:49 PM
 Subject: Re: [Blind-Computing] Deleting corrupt directory


 Hi Ishe;

 Where does someone get this Unlocker tool you speak of?
 It sounds like it
 would be a handy tool to have available.  I am running
 XPSP3 Home.  Take
 care.
 Mike

 ----- Original Message -----
 From: "Ishe Chinyoka" <[email protected]
 To: <[email protected]
 Sent: Friday, May 28, 2010 11:33 AM
 Subject: Re: [Blind-Computing] Deleting corrupt
directory


 1.  Run chkdsk on the directory to recover some chains.

 or

 2.  Get the Unlocker tool.  It will show you which process
 is locking that
 file.  Try unlocking the file and delete it.
 ----- Original Message -----
 From: "Alan & Terrie Robbins" <[email protected]
 To: <[email protected]
 Sent: Friday, May 28, 2010 8:10 PM
 Subject: Re: [Blind-Computing] Deleting corrupt
directory


 Mike,

 Thanks for the suggestion but does not appear to work.
I
 finally tracked down the culprit file about 6-7
 directories
 deep and it has nothing before it.  I can't rename it,
 open
 it, move it etc.  Any other ideas from anyone?

 Al

 -----Original Message-----
 From: [email protected]
 [mailto:[email protected]]on
Behalf
 Of
 Mike &
 Barbara
 Sent: Friday, May 28, 2010 1:21 PM
 To: [email protected]
 Subject: Re: [Blind-Computing] Deleting corrupt
 directory


 Hi Al;

 If I remember correctly, these corrupted files have a
 tilda
 or some kind of
 sign at the front of their title.  If you press your F2
 key
 with the file in
 question highlighted and delete the sign out of the
name
 then press enter I
 think the file can now be deleted.  Pressing the F2 on
a
 highlighted file
 allows you to change / alter the whole name / title or
 any
 part of it.
 After you have made the changes to your title / name
 press
 enter to save the
 changes and save them.  Hope, and I do mean hope, this
 helps.  Take care.
 Mike

 ----- Original Message -----
 From: "Alan & Terrie Robbins" <[email protected]
 To: "Blind-Computing" <[email protected]
 Sent: Friday, May 28, 2010 9:16 AM
 Subject: [Blind-Computing] Deleting corrupt directory


 Good afternoon,

 I run across this problem once in a while and am
 presently
 facing it.  Is there a way to delete a directory and/or
 file
 that has become corrupt and window's will not allow one
 to
 delete it? This is an old backup file within a
directory
 on
 a back up drive.  I know I could re format the drive but
 then
 I would need to copy all the good data back and that is
 considerable.  Any suggestions?

 Al


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