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#11
Thank you again 14tomcat,
I just have one question: If I set a restore point before I run the repair, can I restore it back if things don't work out?
Don Cole
[QUOTE=doncole;806135]Thank you again 14tomcat,
I just have one question: If I set a restore point before I run the repair, can I restore it back if things don't work out?
Don Cole[/QUOTE @doncole ... A restore point is useless for an upgrade from one version to the next. The process will delete all restore points. Any you have made for 10586 would not be usable for 14393, so the upgrade procedure deletes them...on purpose. A full image backup on a separate external drive is the safest way. The process will create a windows.old directory for rollback of the system files only, but the full image backup, stored separately, and disconnected during the upgrade is the safest and most reliable way.