
The North Orange County Computer Club helps The Gadgetress tackle the multitude of readers cries for help. NOCCC group has experts in Windows, Word and all sorts of computer topics. The club, which meets monthly on various topics, has been in existence since 1976. Visit the club’s site at noccc.org.
Question: I need a way to remove Windows XP SP2 from one of my computers, since no built-in utility has been of help. Every time I re-install the operating system, I unwittingly create another system. I have reached four of these. On an old ThinkPad R32, not only has this wasted a lot of useful space, but it has created conflicts as well.
I went to a renowned Web site where I found a discussion thread with a link to a small third-party utility that might have helped. Unfortunately, the built-in DVD/CD-Rom has provision only for music, graphic or mixed music-graphic options but none for data files when it comes to the Autoplay feature that is necessary for that third-party utility to work.
Therefore, I have not been able to use the software, and I am at square one with many OS “versions” on that skimpy little hard drive. I have not been successful at reformatting the hard drive either. Let me add that I do not have an external diskette drive which I might have attempted.
How do I go about erasing the whole hard drive and installing a fresh version of XP under the circumstances? Is there any cheap program, shareware or freeware that might allow me to delete Windows entirely?
NOCCC: According to the IBM specification for your laptop, it should have a “24x CD; 8X DVD; 8X, 4X, 24X Max CD-RW/CD-RW- DVD (Combo)” drive.
Data and program files on a CD should be accessible by clicking on “Start,” and then “My Computer.” You can also right-click on “Start,” select “Explore,” and click on the CD drive letter in the directory on the left.
The Ultimate Boot CD, which is a free download from ultimatebootcd.com, will solve your problem. It provides several tools for erasing your hard disk.
You, or a friend, can go to the UBCD site, download an image of their bootable disk and burn it to a CD-ROM. When you boot from that disk, it will give a menu of the 100-plus available utilities. Links on the UBCD site provide detailed descriptions of most of the programs.
Your ThinkPad R32 may be “old,” but if you installed its maximum of 1,024 megabytes of RAM, it should still perform nicely. Bigger hard disk drives are currently quite reasonable. Driver downloads are still available from IBM.
– Jim Sanders, NOCCC president
Wow, that OCCC response sucks! And, it was from the president. The user wants to reformat and “clean” install Windows XP. All the user needs to do is 1st back up his files, pictures, data. etc. on the laptop. Then insert the XP istall CD and reboot laptop to this CD. During this installation of XP you’ll see there is another version of XP already installed. Read what’s on the screen. I think you then press ESC and at this point you will be able to reformat your hard drive by pressing D to delete the partition. Pressing L to confirm. You may have several of these for each version of XP you’ve previously installed. And then selecting Quick Format NTFS. The rest of the process is basic and easy. Once installed run Windows update to get the latest drivers. If you are unable to get online or have other hardware driver issues check the IBM site for you model and download the needed drivers there.