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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | After creating 17 backup discs, Vista tells me backup "failed" I just spent a day and a half creating several back-up disks so that I can reinstall my OS. After creating disc # 17 (almost 18 hours after I created disc #1), I did what I did for the previous 17 discs and inserted a new disc #18. I then received this error: "The backup did not complete successfully. An error occurred. The following information might help you sove the problem: The wrong diskette is in the drive. Insert %2 (Volume serial number: %3) into drive %1. (0x80070022)." Again, I had already created 17 BACKUP DISKS and if I have to start over, well some blood will be spilled tonight (and it will be my laptop's and Vista's...) Please tell me all is not lost. I had previously installed Vista on a less-than-year-old laptop which apparently did not have enough juice to run this OS successfully (or efficiently or even slowly) and I'd had enough of waiting 30 seconds for a photo to open or 5 minutes for the the thing to boot up. So I wanted to install a fresh copy of XP and get out of this he**. So I did what I was supposed to do and let Vista do the backup. I have no idea where to go from here. Any advice would be most appreciated. --Annik |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: After creating 17 backup discs, Vista tells me backup "failed" Ok, I won't tell you that you will have to start from scratch again. Why are you backing up to disc ? Back up to a folder on your hard drive. Much faster. Or run a image program. "AS" <AS@xxxxxx> wrote in message news:B155025F-5563-4F35-93EE-32576756CDB0@xxxxxx Quote: > I just spent a day and a half creating several back-up disks so that I can > reinstall my OS. After creating disc # 17 (almost 18 hours after I created > disc #1), I did what I did for the previous 17 discs and inserted a new > disc > #18. I then received this error: > > "The backup did not complete successfully. An error occurred. The > following > information might help you sove the problem: The wrong diskette is in the > drive. Insert %2 (Volume serial number: %3) into drive %1. (0x80070022)." > > Again, I had already created 17 BACKUP DISKS and if I have to start over, > well some blood will be spilled tonight (and it will be my laptop's and > Vista's...) > > Please tell me all is not lost. I had previously installed Vista on a > less-than-year-old laptop which apparently did not have enough juice to > run > this OS successfully (or efficiently or even slowly) and I'd had enough of > waiting 30 seconds for a photo to open or 5 minutes for the the thing to > boot > up. So I wanted to install a fresh copy of XP and get out of this he**. So > I > did what I was supposed to do and let Vista do the backup. I have no idea > where to go from here. Any advice would be most appreciated. > > --Annik |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #3 (permalink) |
| | Re: After creating 17 backup discs, Vista tells me backup "failed" The spectrum of those using Microsoft software in general, and Windows in particular, is very broad; my intent for this post is to speak to the users who do not lie towards the endpoints of this spectrum. I realize ahead of time that this is going to be a long post (perhaps mostly off-topic in this thread), but I'm posting it here anyway. I see many kinds of anger in microsoft.public newsgroups, and I, too, need a moment to vent now and again. I believe that the original poster wants a clean reinstallation and has no other medium onto which the backup can be saved. For myself, I no longer consider freshly installing any of the 21st-century versions of Windows onto anything other than a completely-wiped hard drive. I no longer use upgrade Windows products, either. The post-9x versions of Windows are way too complex, and their issues way too numerous, for me to have confidence that post-installation problems (within a reasonable time interval) could not be a function of pre-existing conditions. My rhetorical question is, "Why skip eliminating *any* potential factors over which you have control when the end goal is to reduce the number of issues overall"? This question becomes less rhetorical in the light of how often a clean reinstallation of Windows turns out to be the easiest solution at the end of the day. It's easy when you're ready and waiting, that is. Kevin's rhetorical question makes an important point, also. It is no longer reasonable to rely on floppy disks for system-backup purposes if you are using any 21st-century version of Windows because it's definitely too much useless disks and wasted time when something goes wrong. (I recall swapping many floppy disks using the pre-21st-century versions of Windows, and some of those memories are not-very-happy times. In hindsight, it was stupid for me to have waited nearly three years after writeable CDs became available to begin using them.) After 20+ years of Microsoft experience, I'm convinced that the best way to go with Microsoft software today is mindset, preparation and priorities -- in that order. Mindset: Train yourself to be satisfied with the basic functionalities that work for you, and forget about glitches related to cosmetics, the loss of bells or whistles, and all of the *minor* irritations that Microsoft must now pass from one version to the next. This is hard to do because we want both what we pay for and our expectations (all the way from "faster and easier" to "Wow") to be reasonably met. But, Microsoft's flagship product has become a run-away locomotive; Windows has evolved beyond the ability of any team at Microsoft to get a handle on it. Yet, Microsoft's business plan does not evolve as a "partner" in support of Windows. To stay one step ahead, Microsoft continues to aggressively seek out market share practically anywhere they sense opportunity for potential profit or some degree of revenue stabilization, and they continue to do it in the absence of certain foundational considerations. As long as Microsoft continues to try assimilate so many acquired technologies and ideas into Windows to market some integrated, seamless be-all-for-all OS concept, Windows becomes more complex, and the relative coding errors increase. Try to get used to it. This strategy also leads to misguided development-resource shifting. (An acquaintance at Microsoft's Redmond campus told me in late August that one might get the impression that Vista is "already obsolete" if they were to see some of the priorities being allocated to Microsoft's next vision of Windows features versus some of the priorities being given to address what remain as serious issues with released products.) I view the overall situation as a vicious cycle, and I force myself to deal with it every week through mindset, preparation, and priorities because I do not really have a choice of platforms. Preparation: Keep reminding yourself that loss of even basic functionality *will* happen, probably proportionate to your setup and usage. You *will* eventually experience some degree of disaster. If you're busy, then it may be a few times per year. Get ready now. Take a serious look at your setup, and plan ahead. If you do not have an external hard drive, start saving money today to buy one. If your system cannot archive to CD or DVD discs, then you might consider that hardware upgrade, instead; don't make the same stupid mistake that I made by putting it off. Be organized. Start putting together a disaster-preparedness kit; get your drivers archived with notes and instructions, keep your passwords handy, find backup software you like and use it weekly to protect what's important to you. Your computer usage might call for more extensive preparation. I've saved several of my old systems from the past two decades, and I still use them. If you're lucky enough to have more than one computer, then dedicate your major tasks to one system or the other, not both. There are four computers in my place that are on almost every day. Three more get turned on once a month or so. I use separate computers for financial transactions, for play, for trying experiments (eg: freeware, shareware, Vista). Should I be embarrassed that I set up a dedicated laptop for responding to SPAM? I'm not embarrassed to say that most of my postal correspondence and database work is done on a Hewlett-Packard 486 desktop with a 16MB hard drive running Windows 3.1 on DOS 6.22, MS Word 5 and some version of dBase. Windows 3.1 is lightening fast for very basic computer work. Within 45 seconds of sitting down, the new document is open, the address is typed, and the envelope is coming out of the printer. Works 8 on my 2.16GHz TOSHIBA with 2GB RAM and Windows XP might still be launching. After reading this far, I hope that you get my point. Priorities: Which of the following two situations is more worthy of attention? Some pop-up taskbar notification balloons in Windows Vista still appear behind the taskbar at times when you really need to know what they say, along with 649 other irritating bugs and issues. Roughly 650* children under age 12 died from easily-preventable causes in developing countries during the 45 minutes that it took for me to type this post. Now do you get my point? ~ Mark *extrapolated from 1997 World Health Organization data based on annual non-HIV mortality estimates Kevin Weaver wrote: Quote: > > Ok, I won't tell you that you will have to start from scratch again. > > Why are you backing up to disc ? Back up to a folder on > your hard drive. Much faster. Or run a image program. Quote: > AS wrote, in part: Quote: >> >> I just spent a day and a half creating several back-up disks >> so that I can reinstall my OS. >> >> The backup did not complete successfully. An error occurred. >> >> Please tell me all is not lost. |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #4 (permalink) |
| | Re: After creating 17 backup discs, Vista tells me backup "failed" AS - Have done more backups han I can count on my fingers, however never involving "so many" disks- so this is onmly a shot at your problem: Are you certain you were being asked to insert another "blank" disk - backup may have been at the stage where you were to insert disk #1 to be, in some way, annotated to indicate the number of disks in the set. Unfortunately the eror code is one of the many "generic" types - genraal but not sspecific An aside: From your post "...So I wanted to install a fresh copy of XP and get out of this he**. So I did what I was supposed to do and let Vista do the backup. ..." - what is the source of "what I was supposed to do"? Reason you did not reformat drive and clean install XP? BTW _ Knowledge Database Article "927522 - "How to restore a computer to a previous windows insstallation after you install Vista" may be of value. "AS" <AS@xxxxxx> wrote in message news:B155025F-5563-4F35-93EE-32576756CDB0@xxxxxx Quote: > I just spent a day and a half creating several back-up disks so that I can > reinstall my OS. After creating disc # 17 (almost 18 hours after I created > disc #1), I did what I did for the previous 17 discs and inserted a new > disc > #18. I then received this error: > > "The backup did not complete successfully. An error occurred. The > following > information might help you sove the problem: The wrong diskette is in the > drive. Insert %2 (Volume serial number: %3) into drive %1. (0x80070022)." > > Again, I had already created 17 BACKUP DISKS and if I have to start over, > well some blood will be spilled tonight (and it will be my laptop's and > Vista's...) > > Please tell me all is not lost. I had previously installed Vista on a > less-than-year-old laptop which apparently did not have enough juice to > run > this OS successfully (or efficiently or even slowly) and I'd had enough of > waiting 30 seconds for a photo to open or 5 minutes for the the thing to > boot > up. So I wanted to install a fresh copy of XP and get out of this he**. So > I > did what I was supposed to do and let Vista do the backup. I have no idea > where to go from here. Any advice would be most appreciated. > > --Annik |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #5 (permalink) |
| | Re: After creating 17 backup discs, Vista tells me backup "failed" When I started out with my Vista Home Premium computer, I tried to use DVD's as my backup media; however, this was futile for me because it took too long and used many DVD's. I bought an external 160 GB USB drive for about $60 that I use solely for backups and that has made my computer backup management a breeze. The problem with backups subsequent to the first one: most of your files do actually change between backups even though you did not overtly change anything; things like your anti-virus program marking the file as ok are enough to trigger the need to back it up again. Get that external drive and you will be glad you did! Cheers.... "AS" <AS@xxxxxx> wrote in message news:B155025F-5563-4F35-93EE-32576756CDB0@xxxxxx Quote: > I just spent a day and a half creating several back-up disks so that I can > reinstall my OS. After creating disc # 17 (almost 18 hours after I created > disc #1), I did what I did for the previous 17 discs and inserted a new > disc > #18. I then received this error: > > "The backup did not complete successfully. An error occurred. The > following > information might help you sove the problem: The wrong diskette is in the > drive. Insert %2 (Volume serial number: %3) into drive %1. (0x80070022)." > > Again, I had already created 17 BACKUP DISKS and if I have to start over, > well some blood will be spilled tonight (and it will be my laptop's and > Vista's...) > > Please tell me all is not lost. I had previously installed Vista on a > less-than-year-old laptop which apparently did not have enough juice to > run > this OS successfully (or efficiently or even slowly) and I'd had enough of > waiting 30 seconds for a photo to open or 5 minutes for the the thing to > boot > up. So I wanted to install a fresh copy of XP and get out of this he**. So > I > did what I was supposed to do and let Vista do the backup. I have no idea > where to go from here. Any advice would be most appreciated. > > --Annik |
My System Specs![]() |
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