Or at least make a system restore point prior to it. You need to be a member in order to leave a comment.
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy! Already have an account? Sign in here. Windows 7 Existing user? MSFN is made available via donations, subscriptions and advertising revenue. Ask a question. Quick access. Search related threads. Remove From My Forums. Asked by:. Archived Forums. For other issues, please use the other Windows 7 forums. Sign in to vote. I have tried to remove the Beta from the Control Panel and from the command line. After the uninstall forces a reboot, Windows 7 says it can't boot.
It tries to repair it but the only fix is to boot in Safe Mode and do a system restore from yesterday. I don't have a pre SP1 Beta restore point available. Any ideas? Wednesday, October 27, PM. Ziegler 0.
What is the complete error message? It did with others though. When I tried to use the command prompt method I got a popup that said SP1 was necessary to the operating system. The command prompt went back to the original starting point before entering the address.
Combat arms received a plethora of tickets on the Win7 service pack issue. It seems to have been an issue with their Anti-hack programing and was fixed in a matter of days.
I have an HP I can see the end result might be inevitable. Windows 7 Ultimate 64 is still on the original drive, but I installed Windows 7 Professional on my new drive and of course the new one being in the original bay defaulted into the C drive. As far as I know, what this does on my computer anyway, is I have to go in and make new shortcuts for my files that are now on G drive, my old drive, and everything works fine. Of course if you have their activation codes you can always pull them off of a reputable torrent site and just use your activation codes if you have them.
Just throwing out some ideas. Not sure if any of them will help you but I hope they do:. Has anyone noticed that once sp1 has been installed, you no longer have access to homegroup, switch user, media sharing, and others. Of course microsoft has nothing to say…… Thanks. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Please click on the following link to open the newsletter signup page: Ghacks Newsletter Sign up.
Ghacks is a technology news blog that was founded in by Martin Brinkmann. I tried doing what you said and received this error message after executing the command: Error: The specified volume shadow copy storage association was not found. Very strange, I looked at help for that command, and indeed your syntax appears to be correct.
Any thoughts? This is for Andre. Ziegler- why do we need too many restore points on a system when Gb can contain about the same number of restore points? Atleast thats my personal experience. After all they are only used to go back to the last best system state and to undo any performance issues that may have been caused by your last system change. Can you please enlighten me on this? I myself lost all my restore points on installing SP1 Beta though I dont think it was due to the size of space reserved for RPs.
I manually created one which was of about mb. Your idea of exporting your restore points on another drive is new to me. Since the System Restore space is a limited resource, and new restore points use up some of that space, the SP1 installer may need to delete older restore points in order to make room for its own restore point.
The behavior you have observed is by design. I then received the following error message: "Error: The specified volume shadow copy storage association was not found. At this point, I am assuming that is by design That sounds very strange indeed. Perhaps you don't have System Restore enabled, or haven't enough disc space on your C" drive dedicated to System Restore? Disk space was adequate- over 50 gb unused in both.
Let me try a few more installations and I'll post back.
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