

If the problem remains, it is a good indication of a hardware problem. If you aren't sure if a new problem is hardware or software related, you can roll the system software back to when you know it worked.If you are busy working on your computer and your system develops problems, instead of taking the time to research and fix them, you can restore your system in minutes and get back to work.If after a time your system performance degrades, you can roll the system back to its 'fresh install' state without having to reinstall.After a system upgrade or other 'surgery' gone wrong, you can roll the system back to its exact previous state.10 Alternatives To Using SystemRescueCDįrequently Asked Questions Why Is This Useful?.9 How To Install SystemRescueCD On A Hard Drive.8 How To Burn A Bootable DVD Containing Backup Files And Tools.7.8 Scenario #8: Moving A System To Another Partition.7.5 Scenario #5: Alternating Versions Of Linux.7.4 Scenario #4: A New Version Of Linux On Your Test Partition.7.3 Scenario #3: A New Version Of Windows On Your Test Partition.7.2 Scenario #2: Repair Or Reinstall Of Windows On A Multi-Boot System.7.1 Scenario #1: System Modification Gone Bad.5.4 Backing Up And Restoring The Boot Process.5 How The Computer Boots - The MBR Explained.4.6 How To Restore An MBR And Partition Table.4.5 How To Copy Data To A Smaller Partition.4.4 Restore Partition - Partimage Method.4.3 Restore Partition - FSArchiver Method.3.7.2 Automatic Backup Of The /home Folder.3.7.1 Manual Backup Of The /home Folder.3.5 How To Back Up An MBR And Partition Table.3.4 Create Partition Backup - Partimage Method.3.3 Create Partition Backup - FSArchiver Method.1.2 What Operating Systems Can Be Backed Up?.
