Posted May 24, 2012
Yesterday my desktop PC started spamming me with Hard Disk failure error windows, saying it lost access to part of the OS or something, and while it gives me the options to scan the disk or do it later, the first does nothing and the second restarts the computer.
The PC is also constantly working and very slow and a lot of folders on my hard disk are not shown anymore and those in My Documents all come up as empty. I know that at least part of the stuff is still there though because if I search for certain programs or games that sit in the vanished folders (with the Explorer or the Start Menu search), I can still locate and start them. The search isn't able to find all specific files, but that may also be due to its general inefficiency (usually I hardly use these search functions because my experience taught me not to trust them). Strangely enough, all files in the Program Files folder are still there and accesible.
Another thing that's strange is that the quickstart icons from the taskbar are not displayed anymore and all the options usually found on the right side of Vista's Start Menu are gone, too.
I'm not really sure if all this is caused by a genuine hard disk defect (the hard disk was pretty full, only about 15 gb of free space left) or if it's just a malware attack messing with my system (I've read about similar symptoms in connection with a trojan). In any case, I can't access the most important data anymore, that is my personal documents and my savegames. I have a decent amount of my personal documents backed up on other media, I think, but I haven't done it systematically and I might lose some more or less important stuff nevertheless. And losing the savegames of RPGs and adventures I already spent countless hours with would be pretty annoying, too. I don't think I could bring myself to replay them, so I would miss out on their endings.
Any idea what I could do? I've thought about letting a professional have a look at it, but I can't really afford to pay much more than $100 dollar for it and the prices for saving your personal data from a defective hard disk seem pretty high for a private person with low income (even 200-600 or in some case more than $1000). Not sure if it's worth it. :(
The PC is also constantly working and very slow and a lot of folders on my hard disk are not shown anymore and those in My Documents all come up as empty. I know that at least part of the stuff is still there though because if I search for certain programs or games that sit in the vanished folders (with the Explorer or the Start Menu search), I can still locate and start them. The search isn't able to find all specific files, but that may also be due to its general inefficiency (usually I hardly use these search functions because my experience taught me not to trust them). Strangely enough, all files in the Program Files folder are still there and accesible.
Another thing that's strange is that the quickstart icons from the taskbar are not displayed anymore and all the options usually found on the right side of Vista's Start Menu are gone, too.
I'm not really sure if all this is caused by a genuine hard disk defect (the hard disk was pretty full, only about 15 gb of free space left) or if it's just a malware attack messing with my system (I've read about similar symptoms in connection with a trojan). In any case, I can't access the most important data anymore, that is my personal documents and my savegames. I have a decent amount of my personal documents backed up on other media, I think, but I haven't done it systematically and I might lose some more or less important stuff nevertheless. And losing the savegames of RPGs and adventures I already spent countless hours with would be pretty annoying, too. I don't think I could bring myself to replay them, so I would miss out on their endings.
Any idea what I could do? I've thought about letting a professional have a look at it, but I can't really afford to pay much more than $100 dollar for it and the prices for saving your personal data from a defective hard disk seem pretty high for a private person with low income (even 200-600 or in some case more than $1000). Not sure if it's worth it. :(
Post edited May 24, 2012 by Leroux
This question / problem has been solved by JMich
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