pjbruce wrote:
> Sorry, yes of course a repair installation.
>
> "PD43" wrote:
>
>> pjbruce <pjbruce@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
>>
>>> I recently had a crash due to Norton Ghost. Re-installed winxp fresh
>>> installation but now trying to install other programs and some of them want
>>> to install to my old user account e.g. C:\Documents and settings\wrong
>>> user\local settings\application data etc.
>>>
>>> Anyone with ideas?
>> Just a question: if you did a "fresh installation" - which would mean
>> a clean installation - the system shouldn't have any "old user
>> account".
>>
>> Do you mean you did a "repair installation"?
>>
There is still something odd about your description.
As PD43 suggests, a "fresh install" (what usually is called a "clean
install") formats the drive and thus there wouldn't be any old user
accounts present.
A "repair install" will replace the system files with the files on the
XP CD used for the Repair Install, but *should* leave your applications
and settings intact. If that's what you did, you shouldn't have to
reinstall your applications.
If you decided to reinstall Windows because you attempted to restore
your disk from a corrupted Ghost image (and you don't have another,
good, Ghost image to use), you probably should (a) back up whatever data
files you can and then (b) do a clean install. Following the clean
install, you can reinstall your applications and data to wherever you like.
--
Lem -- MS-MVP
To the moon and back with 2K words of RAM and 36K words of ROM.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_Guidance_Computer
http://history.nasa.gov/afj/compessay.htm