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Solve : Norton Antivirus deleted a Windows nls file...? |
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Answer» Okay, we have Windows XP Home Edition, on a Dell Dimension 8200. When I did a full system scan yesterday with Norton Antivirus, it detected and deleted a 'suspicious' file. When I started my puter this morning, it said the following: Well, we don't have our set-up cd anymore, who knows what happened to them. Without any backup restore disks ( which would have come with the PC ) your in big trouble ........you don't just lose that sort of thing . let us know dl65 Try the following: 1. Before Windows XP loads, press F8 2. Choose last known good configuration.Thanks for the responses! Okay, I tried 'last known good config' and safe mode startup, but both of those lead me back to the same error message. I'm certain it was Norton that deleted the file. When I did a full system scan yesterday, Norton found four 'suspicious' files, but the 'delete failed' for three and succeeded for one (I don't remember it asking me if I wanted them deleted, it just told me that it had). I checked out where the other three undeletable files were (before I turned off my computer yesterday) and they were in the same folder (system32) as the one which is now considered missing or corrupt. So I'm sure it was Norton. I think we made the mistake of loaning those setup cds to someone several years AGO, and they were never returned. :-/ That's a mistake that'll never be repeated. If I can find someone else that has Windows XP Home Ed and borrow their stuff (and carefully return it), do you think we could recover the file that way? Are their several different versions of Windows XP Home, or just one?Is the drive formatted to NTFS or to FAT32? It could make a difference...C_1252.nls File Missing or CorruptI honestly don't know. How do I check/change how my drive is formatted? What is the difference? Quote I honestly don't know. How do I check/change how my drive is formatted? What is the difference? Try using a Windows 98 bootdiskette, if it can read the Hard Disk Drive/partitions it is FAT32. If it can not read them, it is NTFS.Unfortunately, I don't have a Windows 98 boot diskette. :-/ We're gonna see if we can borrow someone's installation cd for XP Home. Thanks for the help (especially that c_1252 missing or corrupt link, that's rather useful ) This forum is pretty cool. It is now bookmarked. For future modify the setting of Norton. Under configure section change the "delete file" to quarrantine.Good thinking!You can download a '98 bootdiskette image file from here... BOOTDISK ARCHIVE ...to a good computer's hard drive, double-click on the image file and put a floppy in the A: drive to make yourself a '98 bootdisk. DOS COMMANDS |
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