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I upgraded to Vista business from XP pro. Did not go well so did clean install. Before all this I backed up everything important to D: drive my internal storage disk. After Vista was installed I tried to access my files on D: only to find I did not have permission to access them. Changed Vista loggin to be the "Real" administrator, disabled UAC, took ownership of all files in D: drive. Still not accessable. Seems like an encryption problem maybe. Any ideas. Thanks
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Hi Gordon
Have a look at disk management: Control Panel --> Administrative Tools --> Computer Management
Just check to see if this the drive is being properly recognised, i have had quite few external hard drive/additional storage devices that are appearing as Foriegn Disks and have to enable/import them before being to access to the files.
Scott
"Gordon" wrote:
[Quoted Text] > I upgraded to Vista business from XP pro. Did not go well so did clean > install. Before all this I backed up everything important to D: drive my > internal storage disk. After Vista was installed I tried to access my files > on D: only to find I did not have permission to access them. Changed Vista > loggin to be the "Real" administrator, disabled UAC, took ownership of all > files in D: drive. Still not accessable. Seems like an encryption problem > maybe. Any ideas. Thanks
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"IscaComps" wrote:
[Quoted Text] > Hi Gordon > > Have a look at disk management: > Control Panel --> Administrative Tools --> Computer Management > > Just check to see if this the drive is being properly recognised, i have had > quite few external hard drive/additional storage devices that are appearing > as Foriegn Disks and have to enable/import them before being to access to the > files. > > Scott > > > > >
I have checked the files in my D: drive. Yes they are encrypted with my old XP user. They will open only with this user. Which now does not exist. Even with full administrator rights in Vista I can not add myself as a user to the certificate list for each file. I need permission from the original XP administrator. Encryption removal software will not budge it either. So I figure I am screwed once again by Microsoft. Tried the rollback to XP through command box and at the end the user account would not move. Access denied was the message. The computer would not boot into anything after that. But did show Vista and XP as boot options. Tried repairing the boot up. No go so wiped the drive clean did reinstall. Have a computer but no files can only stare at the 18GB of files on D:. Tried access to these files from my wifes XP box but same problem access denied you do not have permission to view this file. Sounds like the commercial.
Gordon
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Ok, lets try this one:
Right click on the drive you are trying access goto Properties. Click on the security tab and then click on Advanced. Click the tab for 'Owner', if your current Vista account appears in the box below, select the user name and then click Apply. Click on the Permissions tab in the same window, then 'Edit' - add your user name to the list of permitted users/groups if it is not already there. Select the your name in the list then click Edit, adjust the permissions as you require, normally Full Control, click OK. Ensure there is a tick in 'Replace all existing inheritable permissions.....etc' box. Click Apply, OK, OK, OK.
If that doesn't work, then the only other thing I can think is to use some Data Recovery software, do a quick scan, recover the documents and then reformat your drive.
The only problem I have with some data recovery software is that they haven't got permission to recover deleted items on Vista, even with Administrator rights, so try it on a XP machine.
Good luck. Scott
"Gordon" wrote:
[Quoted Text] > > > "IscaComps" wrote: > > > Hi Gordon > > > > Have a look at disk management: > > Control Panel --> Administrative Tools --> Computer Management > > > > Just check to see if this the drive is being properly recognised, i have had > > quite few external hard drive/additional storage devices that are appearing > > as Foriegn Disks and have to enable/import them before being to access to the > > files. > > > > Scott > > > > > > > > > > > I have checked the files in my D: drive. Yes they are encrypted with my old > XP user. They will open only with this user. Which now does not exist. Even > with full administrator rights in Vista I can not add myself as a user to the > certificate list for each file. I need permission from the original XP > administrator. Encryption removal software will not budge it either. So I > figure I am screwed once again by Microsoft. Tried the rollback to XP through > command box and at the end the user account would not move. Access denied was > the message. The computer would not boot into anything after that. But did > show Vista and XP as boot options. Tried repairing the boot up. No go so > wiped the drive clean did reinstall. Have a computer but no files can only > stare at the 18GB of files on D:. Tried access to these files from my wifes > XP box but same problem access denied you do not have permission to view this > file. Sounds like the commercial. > > Gordon
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On Jun 24, 9:13 pm, IscaComps <IscaCo...[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
[Quoted Text] > > The only problem I have with some data recovery software is that they > haven't got permission torecoverdeleteditems on Vista, even with > Administrator rights, so try it on a XP machine.
This shouldn't be a problem with Partition Recovery from www.diskinternals.co.uk .. You can access the drive to be recovered at the drive or volume level, so it ignores security rights. You can even create an image of the drive you want to recover from, and then do the recovery using a different PC.
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To recover the data from inaccessible hard drive you can try Stellar Phoenix Windows Data Recovery Software. Stellar phoenix supports Windows Vista. Stellar Phoenix is a file and partition recovery utility which helps in recovering lost data from formated hard drive or data lost occur due to software malfunction, file/ directory deletion or even sabotage. Download the demo version of the software: http://www.stellarinfo.com/partition-recovery.htm scan your hard drive and see the preview. if the scan result shows you the recovered data then to save your recovered file get the full version.
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"IscaComps" wrote:
[Quoted Text] > Ok, lets try this one: > > Right click on the drive you are trying access goto Properties. > Click on the security tab and then click on Advanced. > Click the tab for 'Owner', if your current Vista account appears in the box > below, select the user name and then click Apply. > Click on the Permissions tab in the same window, then 'Edit' - add your user > name to the list of permitted users/groups if it is not already there. > Select the your name in the list then click Edit, adjust the permissions as > you require, normally Full Control, click OK. > Ensure there is a tick in 'Replace all existing inheritable > permissions.....etc' box. > Click Apply, OK, OK, OK. > > If that doesn't work, then the only other thing I can think is to use some > Data Recovery software, do a quick scan, recover the documents and then > reformat your drive. > > The only problem I have with some data recovery software is that they > haven't got permission to recover deleted items on Vista, even with > Administrator rights, so try it on a XP machine. > > Good luck. > Scott > > > > "Gordon" wrote: > > > > > > > "IscaComps" wrote: > > > > > Hi Gordon > > > > > > Have a look at disk management: > > > Control Panel --> Administrative Tools --> Computer Management > > > > > > Just check to see if this the drive is being properly recognised, i have had > > > quite few external hard drive/additional storage devices that are appearing > > > as Foriegn Disks and have to enable/import them before being to access to the > > > files. > > > > > > Scott > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I have checked the files in my D: drive. Yes they are encrypted with my old > > XP user. They will open only with this user. Which now does not exist. Even > > with full administrator rights in Vista I can not add myself as a user to the > > certificate list for each file. I need permission from the original XP > > administrator. Encryption removal software will not budge it either. So I > > figure I am screwed once again by Microsoft. Tried the rollback to XP through > > command box and at the end the user account would not move. Access denied was > > the message. The computer would not boot into anything after that. But did > > show Vista and XP as boot options. Tried repairing the boot up. No go so > > wiped the drive clean did reinstall. Have a computer but no files can only > > stare at the 18GB of files on D:. Tried access to these files from my wifes > > XP box but same problem access denied you do not have permission to view this > > file. Sounds like the commercial. > > > > Gordon
Thanks for the help. The hard drive is not a problem. Yes I have done all the permissions for the drive. The problem is file encryption from XP pro. By default it encrypted all my saved files. They are in green font on the drive. Without the key from the the XP account they were saved by they can not be accessed. All data is there so no need to recover anything. I did try and delete a couple of files and recover them to my desktop but they still are encrypted. Also checked the partition recovery software. It shows the files as being encrypted also. Need to recover the key which is next to impossible. Gordon
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Just a footnote. When my kids are old enough to play on a computer they will be learning on a Mac.
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And when they need some essential software that does not exist for the = Mac,=20 they will learn how to use Windows (or Linux, etc). "Gordon" <Gordon[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> a =C3=A9crit dans le = message de news:A1AB9F06-619D-4343-B7BC-1E0334CC0D10[ at ]microsoft.com... Just a footnote. When my kids are old enough to play on a computer = they will=20 be learning on a Mac. ------=_NextPart_000_003F_01C7BC3A.10476D30 Content-Type: text/html; charset="Utf-8" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
=EF=BB=BF<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"> <HTML><HEAD> <META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D"text/html; charset=3Dutf-8"> <META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.6000.16481" name=3DGENERATOR> <STYLE></STYLE> </HEAD> <BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>And when they need some essential = software that=20 does not exist for the Mac, </FONT></DIV> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>they will learn how to use Windows (or = Linux,=20 etc).</FONT></DIV> <BLOCKQUOTE=20 style=3D"PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; = BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px"> <DIV>"Gordon" <<A=20 = href=3D"mailto:Gordon[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com">Gordon[ at ]discussions.micro= soft.com</A>>=20 a =C3=A9crit dans le message de <A=20 = href=3D"news:A1AB9F06-619D-4343-B7BC-1E0334CC0D10[ at ]microsoft.com">news:A1A= B9F06-619D-4343-B7BC-1E0334CC0D10[ at ]microsoft.com</A>...</DIV>Just=20 a footnote. When my kids are old enough to play on a computer they = will <BR>be=20 learning on a Mac.</BLOCKQUOTE></BODY></HTML>
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