I don't have a floppy drive, and it never seems to recognize the "boot USB
memory sticks" I've tried.

The next time I'm near a CD burner, I'm going to try the Hitachi site that
Robert suggested.

I think it's still under warranty, but it's going to be a while before I can
be in the same place as the computer and a phone long enough for a support
call during work hours. (I'm offsite at MySQL training). So, I'm
piece-mealing and flying by the seat of my pants until then.

On 2/28/07, Simon Ruiz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Ugh. I know that, especially with SATA drives, sometimes you need to get
drivers from the manufacturer and have them on a floppy disk (do you even
have a floppy drive?) for the Windows Installer to be able to work with
unrecognized hardware.

A big PITA, if you don't mind me saying, but usually possible.

Take a look at
http://xphelpandsupport.mvps.org/how_do_i_install_windows_xp_on_a.htm

Is the Installer CD you're trying to use some sort of recovery disc that
came with the hardware? I'm guessing not, cause those should definitely have
all the correct drivers on them.

The other possibility is that you're having some form of hardware
malfunction, if the CD that's supposedly custom-made for that hardware
configuration (I'm assuming this, if you're getting a repair disc from
Lenovo) is having issues with ram disk and crashing when you try to run the
formatting tool.

Out of curiosity, do you happen to still be under warranty? This is one of
those situations where a little chat with the hardware providers might be
worthwhile. They would probably be able to tell you whether this is some
sort of hardware failure, or maybe it's an issue other owners of that
hardware configuration have had before...

Ubuntu installs and works flawlessly on it, you say? Score one for the
home team.

Sim?n

________________________________

From: Michael Steigerwald [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wed 2/28/2007 11:05 AM
To: Simon Ruiz
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Dual boot (XP) best practice


FWIW, it's a SATA disk.

I've downloaded the repair CD image from Lenovo and can boot from it.
However, it complains about an error using RAM disk. It crashes whenever I
try FDISK32. I wonder if the CD image is bad, so I'm going to try a fresh
one.

TIA for any additional suggestions.


On 2/27/07, Simon Ruiz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

        You can find photos of the different connector types below:
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AT_Attachment - IDE
        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SATA

        If the Windows CD's fdisk can see the hard disk, though, it
shouldn't be a driver problem. I haven't the slightest clue why the
Installer wouldn't be able to see something Microsoft's fdisk can see...

        Is there perhaps some form of "factory formatting" option in
fdisk? I dunno, I'm grasping at straws here...

        Simón

        ________________________________

        From: Michael Steigerwald [mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        Sent: Tue 2/27/2007 3:01 PM
        To: Simon Ruiz
        Subject: Re: edubuntu-users Digest, Vol 9, Issue 20


        Thanks for the complement.

        I assume it's IDE, but I don't really know how to tell.

        The fdisk I'm referring to is what I run from the installer
command shell I get into from the Rescue a Broken System startup option.





--
Michael Steigerwald
4041 12th Ave S.
Minneapolis, MN 55407-3239
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
651.261.2098




--
Michael Steigerwald
4041 12th Ave S.
Minneapolis, MN 55407-3239
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
651.261.2098
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