Thanks to all for thoughtful comments. Here's what else I can add: 1. Yes, the name.backup.fm files were also corrupt. 2. I'm running Windows XP SP-2 and FM 7.1. 3. The problems all appear to be on a network folder -- and affect FM, Acrobat, Word, and Publisher files. 4. I was able to work on the FM files yesterday afternoon on my local Desktop without issues. 5. After posting we learned the IT guys had been doing network stuff over the weekend -- and that one of the network drives was damaged and irreparable.
We think the flawed drive is our culprit. IT is restoring our entire working folder structure from tape. Here's hoping that does the trick. Jim P.S. -- And, yes, Richard, any corruption is too much :) -----Original Message----- From: Art Campbell [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Monday, November 20, 2006 12:29 PM To: Pinkham, Jim Cc: framers at lists.frameusers.com Subject: Re: Way Too Much Corruption The mass corruption bothers me a lot... it'd point to something systemic, like a BIG voltage spike (had any lightning storms lately), physical hard drive problems... something like that. When you're saying the backups are corrupt too, you mean the name.backup.fm file, or the backups of the entire project? If they're clean, restoring your last system backups is the best thing to do because you haven't changed anything in 6 weeks. If you're saying you didn't back up your work and all the files involved are corrupted... to the point they won't open, or some info inside is twisted, or something else? Art On 11/20/06, Pinkham, Jim <Jim.Pinkham at voith.com> wrote: > I have a folder with three versions of a manual (in subfolders) > replete with conditional text, insets, and all the marvels of single > sourcing. I haven't worked on these files for about 6 weeks. This > morning all of them are coming up as corrupt, including the subfolders and the backups. > Any ideas what might be causing this and how to fix it? Your help is > much appreciated. > > Jim > _______________________________________________ > -- Art Campbell art.campbell at gmail.com "... In my opinion, there's nothing in this world beats a '52 Vincent and a redheaded girl." -- Richard Thompson No disclaimers apply. DoD 358
