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October 18, 2001 12:22 PM

XP's System Restore Feature

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #22945
Rating: (0)
A good tool that needs to be better

While testing a new WebCam with a beta copy of Windows XP, I realized that the WebCam's Windows 2000 driver wasn't working properly with the new OS. I reinstalled my old WebCam, but its Windows 98 driver, which—before I uninstalled it—had worked under XP, then refused to function. Reinstalling the driver didn't fix the problem, so I tried out XP's System Restore feature, which lets you easily restore OS and application files to a previous state. After I selected a restore point that the feature had automatically created the day before, I rebooted, and my old WebCam's driver worked fine.

System Restore will make life easier for technical support staffs that deal with corrupted files and for end users who accidentally overwrite or delete critical files when installing or uninstalling software. Whenever a user installs an unsigned driver or uses InstallShield, Windows Installer Service (WIS), or Windows Update to install software, System Restore copies all OS and application files before the installation proceeds. At a minimum, System Restore creates a restore point every 24 hours. You can also create a restore point manually—a good thing to do before you download applications from the Web.

You can store as many as 3 weeks of past restore points. The number of restore points you can save depends on how many applications you've installed, the amount of free disk space on your system, the frequency with which you install applications or drivers, and the amount of disk space you allocate to restore points (up to 12 percent).

Microsoft introduced System Restore with Windows Me and has refined the application in XP. For example, XP's restore points provide pointers to unchanged files rather than maintain multiple copies of those files, thus utilizing disk space more efficiently and letting the system create restore points more quickly.

But System Restore still feels incomplete because it doesn't protect document files. Microsoft didn't want users to lose recent document changes or email while restoring application or OS files. Although I understand that concern, haven't we all at some time wished that we could quickly restore a document that had been accidentally deleted or changed? Of course, you can retrieve files from a backup, but that takes time.

While working with System Restore, I remembered a similar Roxio product called GoBack 3 Deluxe. This product, which you can download from the vendor's Web site at http://www.roxio.com, monitors all disk activity and continuously records incremental changes to all files, thus letting you roll back the system to virtually any point in time. Although the rollback affects all files on the system, GoBack lets you return specific files to their present state so that you don't lose email and changes to important documents.

System Restore is useful, and I applaud Microsoft for improving it and making it available in XP. Nevertheless, I'll reach for my credit card to buy a third-party product that does everything I need.

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Comments
  • Anonymous User
    8 years ago
    Dec 01, 2004

    I went away this weekend and turned off my computer. When I came back I couldn't get on the Internet or E-mail. Other computers in my household could still get on. I called my ISP and they said that the IP address was not being assigned by my computer. That I should restore to a later date. When I went to restore the only date available was the day before. I wanted to restore back to Friday when I knew it was working. Now what can I do?

  • JACK KELLY
    8 years ago
    Jun 21, 2004

    I have a dell computer with XP home,its about 18 months old. I made a restore point on 6/11/04,started having problems 6/19/04.I tried to use sys restore for the first time.Only showed the 19th & 20th as restore points, would not goback to May, only showed July.Where are the restore points stored? I am the only user of mt computer and when I try to change home page it tells me to contact sys administrator. I am the sys adm but dont know how to tell the computer, it won't let me log on as adm, I did not use a password. Thanks for any help you give.

  • Ann
    8 years ago
    Apr 09, 2004

    I have been using windows xp. Today when starting my computer which is part of a small network of 4 computers froze and I had to resart it. When restarted it does not show all the files and folders on the desktop like it did yesterday when I was using the computer.
    If any can please help me.
    Thanks

  • bob olinski
    8 years ago
    Apr 04, 2004

    My xp system no longer works correctly concerning system restore. It makes restore points, but erases them in a couple of days. I have it set at 12%. can't fix it.

  • Joffrey Vaassen
    8 years ago
    Mar 20, 2004

    This is for shaun: This is because you probably didn't reboot the pc during this time, so the drivers couldn't be stored in the system restore ini file. a separate backup of your system is still a must, because when you can't boot up your machine in safe mode you still need some of backup.

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