Agreed! I wer knott dooing itt rite.a_unique_person said:Yes, but I said it better.
Agreed! I wer knott dooing itt rite.a_unique_person said:Yes, but I said it better.
Damaged Recycled Folder:
The Recycled folder itself can become damaged. Files are moved to the folder and the Recycle Bin on the desktop appears full but you cannot view the contents and the Empty The Recycle Bin command may be unavailable, or simply doesn't work.
Restart the computer and delete the recycle bin by pressing F8 at the WinXP Startup menu, and then select Safe Mode with Command Prompt. Type the following commands, pressing Enter after each line:
attrib -s -h recycled
del recycled
Luke T. said:None of these ideas worked.
I'm not sure anyone is understanding exactly what I am saying.
Luke, I fully understand. I had the exact same problem. I solved it by... ignoring it, figuring it wasn't doing any harm. If you do solve it however I would like to know !Luke T. said:
I'm not sure anyone is understanding exactly what I am saying.
Luke T. said:I give up.
It's almost the same as richardm suggested, but he didn't mention putting a filename after the DEL.Open a Command Prompt window and leave it open. Close all open programs. Click Start, Run and enter TASKMGR.EXE Go to the Processes tab and End Process on Explorer.exe. Leave Task Manager open. Go back to the Command Prompt window and change to the directory the AVI (or other undeletable file) is located in. At the command prompt type DEL filename where filename is the file you wish to delete. Go back to Task Manager, click File, New Task and enter EXPLORER.EXE to restart the GUI shell. Close Task Manager.
You're plenty smart enough to think before you act, Luke - I've read enough of your posts to be fairly sure of that.Luke T. said:
I have never used Linux. I'd probaby do more damage than good.
Zep said:Ahem. Have you tried creating a bootable *gasp* DOS diskette with the NTFS drivers on it? Possible from any Win9x machine plus an internet search for the drivers.
True, and probably the best solution generally. But I seem to recall that it still honours the file protections and attributes (esp. hidden files), plus it still has some files open on the system partition. Would it be the best for this problem, do you think?ShowMe said:Win2K and WinXP can be booted into the Recovery Console, which is a basic DOS prompt that has some special commands.