This is even more true if it was an external drive to begin with. However, if the drive was in the damaged case, and if it’s a traditional mechanical drive, I wouldn’t expect too much from it anyway. We’ve all been warned against moving our PC’s when turned on; as in :”Oh well, I just trashed my 3GB storage device, but I sure nailed that paper clip.” I guess the proliferation of solid-state drives will change that situation over time.
Ted From: HAMILTON [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Saturday, February 13, 2016 12:02 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: missing shortcut error message it may not be fixed right away. : This won't solve your problem with shortcuts; but, you said something in your message that sounds "fishy" to me. You were told that it would be very expensive to remove your hard drive from your crashed machine and install your hard drive into another PC. Well, A friend of mine has done this for me a number of times over the last couple of decades, and it generally takes him anywhere between 10 and 30 minutes. In fact, I am sure that he could instruct me on how to do it myself rather easily. Now, you may not be "technically" inclined; but, that does not mean that people should be taking advantage of you regarding repair costs. Of course, if you have an extremely unusual, complicated PC configuration, requiring much time to get at the hard-drive connection points, ignore the above; but, I do not think that should be the case. Also, I too wonder if moving from XP to Win7 may have anything to do with this. So, I will watch, with interest, for further messages on this subject. Jim H
