I had cm7 installed on my touchpad but decided to do a clean wipe of both android and web OS... so I used the ACMEuninstaller and web OS doctor to restore it.
But now when I connect my touchpad to my mac it says "the disk you inserted was not readable by this computer" and on windows it keeps asking me to format the drive. I am still able to use novacom and web OS doctor...
I have NO idea what I can do to fix this problem...
what would formatting the drive do to my touchpad? would it erase absolutely everything including the system files?
some one help me out!!
windows shouldn't even see the system partitions, so it only the sd mount it wants to format. BUT if u decide to format the sd card don't do it with windows.
USE CWM /mounts and storage/format SDcard
Now i'm not saying to format this is just a safer way if u have to.
Unreadable
I also had the same issue, from the same exact scenario. So I decided to formatted it as FAT32, then copied files over, dismounted, then unplugged. WebOS then said no files were recoverable, then formatted the partition itself. Subsequently it is readable from both my Mac and Windows box.
Related
To make a long story short, I've restored WebOS, did a full wipe (via WebOS) of the SD Card and data and now when trying to go through the process of installing CM on the Touchpad again Windows wants to format the SD Card every time I plug it into the computer.
Is this normal behavior? When I allowed Windows to previously format the card (Fat32), all sorts of problems (booting issues) ensued. I am afraid to do it again.
Thank you.
I found out the hard way that a restore of webOS does NOT restore the SD card to its original state if you had previously installed CM. You have to run ACMEUninstaller prior to re-installing CM.
Doing as you've instructed: running the ACMEUninstaller in the "Pow+Home" mode (novacom boot mem:// < ACMEUninstaller) following a webOS factory reset resulted in the TP booting into wiped WebOS and prompting me to select language.
However, the Windows machine still is unable to read/write to the SD card and hence I am unable to proceed with the process of putting the necessary packages onto the card (CWM, moboot, cm7-alpha3.5).
I'm beginning to think this is an OS problem rather than the TP (this time attempting this process on my work machine running WinXP x86).
Any further advice appreciated
PS. Thinking of attempting to fire up a Linux image in a VM to see if I can mount the SD there...
pbourdyk said:
Doing as you've instructed: running the ACMEUninstaller in the "Pow+Home" mode (novacom boot mem:// < ACMEUninstaller) following a webOS factory reset resulted in the TP booting into wiped WebOS and prompting me to select language.
However, the Windows machine still is unable to read/write to the SD card and hence I am unable to proceed with the process of putting the necessary packages onto the card (CWM, moboot, cm7-alpha3.5).
I'm beginning to think this is an OS problem rather than the TP (this time attempting this process on my work machine running WinXP x86).
Any further advice appreciated
PS. Thinking of attempting to fire up a Linux image in a VM to see if I can mount the SD there...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This happened to me.. I just downloaded webos update, fixed the issue. But if you're already on 3.0.5 not sure of the solution though. If u have home network, u can pull files through es file explorer LAN option
Sent from my HTC Glacier using Tapatalk
I managed to sort everything out.
After successful ACMEUninstall, I reconfigured the factory reset WebOS and tethered my phone for WiFi (corporate wifi around here, so no certificate). After logging in to WebOS, the PC was able to mount the drive and I went through ACMEInstall process with moboot, cwm and cm7-a3.5, everything is working. Thanks.
Now if I could only get this TP on the corporate wifi now, I'd be set (802.1x PEAP MSCHAP-v2 stage2 auth, can only seem to export the required certificate in CER of P7B formats, which android doesn't seem to want to import nicely... -- sorry to go off topic, I'll post a new thread if I don't succeed in this...) Thanks again.
I have an Archos 70 IT with a 1Tb disk upgrade. I've previously managed to connect it to my PC via USB and transfer a load of music files. Now I am able to make the USB connection (it shows up as a drive in Explorer), but Windows doesn't recognise the format of the disk - a message pops up saying "you need to format the disk in drive I: before you can use it". The disk can be accessed fine from within the Archos.
I've tried rebooting but got the same thing.
Can anyone suggest anything?
itm said:
I have an Archos 70 IT with a 1Tb disk upgrade. I've previously managed to connect it to my PC via USB and transfer a load of music files. Now I am able to make the USB connection (it shows up as a drive in Explorer), but Windows doesn't recognise the format of the disk - a message pops up saying "you need to format the disk in drive I: before you can use it". The disk can be accessed fine from within the Archos.
I've tried rebooting but got the same thing.
Can anyone suggest anything?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I got same issue as you and found the solution as beneath process:
(1) double check your Hard Disk whether is already connected by partition software(such as "MiniTool Partition Wizard Home Edition" )?
(2)try to change letter in "partition" in case your hd did not have "partition letter"
Afterward your PC can recognize the format of disk
for your reference
jackson0829 said:
I got same issue as you and found the solution as beneath process:
(1) double check your Hard Disk whether is already connected by partition software(such as "MiniTool Partition Wizard Home Edition" )?
(2)try to change letter in "partition" in case your hd did not have "partition letter"
Afterward your PC can recognize the format of disk
for your reference
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for your recommendation. I installed MiniTool Partition Wizard Home Edition but it simply listed the Archos as a "bad disk", and didn't give me any option to assign a drive letter, or in fact to do anything else with it.
Does anyone else have any ideas??
I also seem to have a problem writing to the HDD from within the Archos O/S. When I use ED File Explorer to copy a file from my LAN to a Downloads folder on the HDD I get a "copy failed" error. I get the same error if I attempt to copy a music file from one location to another in the Music folder.
What partitiontype do you have?
fzelle said:
What partitiontype do you have?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How would I find out?
In Windows Explorer, select the drive and then rightclick Properties.
You should see FileSystem.
If it's NTFS, Android only has a Readonly driver.
fzelle said:
In Windows Explorer, select the drive and then rightclick Properties.
You should see FileSystem.
If it's NTFS, Android only has a Readonly driver.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The problem is that Windows does not recognise the format of the partition - it asks me whether I want to format it when I select it.
you can change the type in the archos.
go in the recoverymenu -> format system -> set storage filesystem and switch it to vfat.
Now windows can read the filefsystem and ur able to copy files ;-)
Hi all.
Here's the situation:
I have a 32 gb Sandisk (unsure of the class) sd card I've used with 2 different phones for at least over a year now. I took the card out of my phone to connect it through my laptops built in card reader for the purpose of transferring large files (card reader speeds are much faster than usb mounting through the phone for me). When I put it in the computer Windows wouldn't recognize it. Now it won't mount in my phone at all, and it won't work correctly on my PC. When I connect it to my computer it says the card needs to be formatted before use, but then when I go to format it, it shows up on the Windows formatting screen as only having a 30.6 mb capacity and I get the message "Windows was unable to complete the format" whenever I try to format it, no matter the settings.
So my question is, how do I get the darn thing to work again? I think something must have happened between shutting my phone down to remove it and putting it in my computer. I just don't know what. Anyone else ever experience this? (I've already given up on recovering all of my files, but if it's possible to save them that would be amazing )
Things I've tried:
formatting via Windows
formatting via android
formatting /external_sd via Clockworkmod recovery
a couple different data recovery/partitioning programs (Partition Wizard and PhotoRec/TestDisk
also using "chkdsk" in windows command prompt returns saying that the disk is in the "RAW" format.
Additional info:
Phone: Motorola Droid RAZR HD (XT926) (Verizon)
ROM: XenonHD 11.01 (Android version 4.2.2, AOSP based)
Sorry if this is more lengthy than necessary, just trying to be thorough and cover all the bases!
Thanks in advance for your help!
Im fully aware that this is more for the development of the Ubuntu Touch, yet because I wanted to start developing, I ended up attempting to dual boot Ubuntu 13.10 alonside Windows 8 to create a proper developing enviornment to learn more about kernel/AOSP build development. VMs wont cut it, as I was advised.
I ended up being able to dual boot Ubuntu 13.10 alongside Windows 8. I had troubles creating a partition for Ubuntu and seemed to have accidentally formatted the biggest drive, which I believe was where the Windows 8 OS was stored. I successfully put Ubuntu on there, installation working smoothly, or so I thought. Upon restart, I entered the GRUB boot selector. I first attempted to enter the Ubuntu OS, which brought me to a black writable page. I restarted the HP and tried booting into Windows 8. It gave me the error that the OS is missing. Now Im stuck in the bootloader and cant access my PC. I have an HP Dv6-6033cl laptop with a 750 hard drive I believe. Any help is appreciated.
Ouch.
If you formatted the Windows partition from NTFS over to ext3 and put Ubuntu on that partition... You've pretty much guaranteed you'll be starting over from scratch.
Ouch.
Before doing anything drastic, get a friend to burn a copy of System Rescue CD for you. Enter Bios and set Boot from CD as the first choice, then boot the Rescue disk. Inspect your drive with the G-Parted tool and find out where you stand with the various partitions.
If your Windows (the partition all the way to the left in the GUI) was indeed formatted to something like ext3, I'm not sure what can be done. If it is still NTFS and you have a Windows CD you can attempt a repair. There are programs out there that will help recover lost files if you can restore Windows, such as iCare Data Recovery.
Did I say "Ouch?"
Ouch.
It may just be a bad flag in the GRUB. Let's hope so. Otherwise... Ouch.
Well this is what it looks like so far:
I know I have two options; completely boot Ubuntu OS or Windows. Only issue is, Id rather not lose all my data.
*Please note - I am not IT trained - this is my amateur advice as someone who has had similar issues. Others (including trained persons) may have wildly different opinions on how you should proceed. I offer this advice in hopes it helps you recover your computer. I can make no guarantees. Proceed at your own risk. This is in no way superior to seeking a qualified repair at a reputable shop which would be the optimal solution.
OK it looks like you didn't overwrite/reformat your Windows partition. It does have issues. (It's labeled sda1/system.) The boot flag is missing, That's likely a bad GRUB install. The used and unused numbers don't add up so it's not being read correctly (possible damaged registry). sda4 is most likely the factory recovery partition for Windows.
Did you make a Recovery Disk? Tell me you did and you can find it...
If it was me, I'd do the following.
Insert your Recovery Disk and attempt a Windows repair
Assuming you can boot into Windows after the repair: make a full set of Backup disks
Make note of how much space Windows and associated program/files are using on the hard drive - you'll want this for reference later
If you have a Recovery Disk and a set of Backup disks you can get back to where you are at any time
Boot into System Rescue CD again, start GParted and begin work on your partitions
Your partitions are nonsensical - partition sda2 (Ubuntu) is only 200 MB which is way too small to be of any use for a working OS, you should probably wipe out partitions sda2, sda3, sda5 and the unallocated space - if it were me I'd take out sda4 as well (you have Recovery disks and you want that space)
Format all the partitions you are reclaiming as NTFS (for now) - Merge all contiguous partitions
Now you can make two separate and distinct choices:
EITHER
A) Keep your Windows install (sda1) and move it to the beginning of the drive (left side of the graphic representation bar) - Moving can cause data corruption (so they warn, but I didn't have an issue when I did this) - moving the partition will save you a lot of time
OR
B) Erase your current Windows by formatting sda1 as a new NTFS partition and merging it with the other space - you should then have one seamless NTFS partition - Use your Recovery and Backup disks to reinstall Windows and recover program/files - This takes longer, but a clean install is always nice.
If you use A) from above, you should have a free 124 GB partition at the end of the hard drive for your Ubuntu install. You can format it as ext3 or ext4 (using GParted) before installing Ubuntu... Or you can just let Ubuntu format it during the install.
If you use B) from above you should decide how much space you want for Ubuntu. Leave enough room for Windows to grow, but give ample space for Ubuntu as well. Create a new partition at the end of the drive in the size you've chosen for Ubuntu and format it as ext3 or ext4. Install and recover Windows files/programs to the NTFS partition at the beginning of the hard drive. Install Ubuntu to the ext partition at the end of the hard drive.
Good Luck!!!
I ended doing a full boot of Ubuntu, since I formatted my Windows 8 partition. I messed up pretty badly, but doing a full install of Ubuntu saved my computer. Unfortunately, I did lose my files. I believe so anyway. Thank you anyway. I will keep this tabbed and refer it to anyone that ever has any issue as I did!
xTurtlex said:
I ended doing a full boot of Ubuntu, since I formatted my Windows 8 partition. I messed up pretty badly, but doing a full install of Ubuntu saved my computer. Unfortunately, I did lose my files. I believe so anyway. Thank you anyway. I will keep this tabbed and refer it to anyone that ever has any issue as I did!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
According to the screen cap you showed, it looks like Windows is still salvageable... Or did you do something else after the screen cap was snapped?
I completely formatted the hard drive to run Ubuntu. I doubt its salvageable without a huge fee.
RumoredNow said:
According to the screen cap you showed, it looks like Windows is still salvageable... Or did you do something else after the screen cap was snapped?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I came across a forensic tool called TestDisk. I have an external hard drive I can use to back up all my lost files onto. Viable solution?
Ok just advice if your installing Ubuntu. When you get asked how u want to install ubuntu always hit 'something else' that's the safest way.
If u have windows installed ... then I feel sorry for you lol
After installing ubuntu on another partition on windows hdd you find only ubuntu is able to boot
Why not just edit grub config,
Add
Title windows
Set root='hd*,msdos*'
Chainloader +1
That will add an option under ubuntu boot screen [grub] to boot windows boot loader [dual booting]
Partitioning advice;
The reason to separate so much is iit makes it 100x easier to restore/backup if something goes wrong. [Ubintu once gave me an error after fresh install using a disk]
sda1 /boot
sda2 /
sda3 /home
sda4 /swap
sdb1 windows
sdb2 storage space to share between OS's
sd** [only good if you use linux alot] extra hdds in a lvm [turns all spare hdds into one folder e.g 1tb 500gb 250gn hdds will become a 1.75tb folder]
Another example of why to hate Windows 8. They started securing the boot loader to make it extremely difficult to dual boot another OS with it. I used to like Windows but it seems to get worse with each iteration.
Sent from my SGH-M919 using xda app-developers app
lalec said:
Another example of why to hate Windows 8. They started securing the boot loader to make it extremely difficult to dual boot another OS with it. I used to like Windows but it seems to get worse with each iteration.
Sent from my SGH-M919 using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yup but its been crap since the original dos code was found in the bin.
So its been worthless from the start winxp was just about bare able.
Main problem with windows though is why should we have to pay for half ass work and then pay to patch up the holes with antivirus's
When I can install linux free be more secure and be free to change any part of os I please.
Sent from my GT-I9505 using xda app-developers app
I have a major problem, it could even be a grave bug, as my USB INSTALL=1 I succeeded to place on a USB3 stick (32-bit, some REMIX B2016112201 version) has nothing else to do than silently format one completely different ext3 partition on a completely different harddrive (sda6). I can, however, bootup the USB full install on several barebones without HDD, no problem, but if I run it with this Laptop here which is multi booting with HDD (sda) and SSD (sdb) it has the nerve to destroy data and I do not know what it makes so destructive. It boots up, and I can use it, but it destroys my Ubuntu mdadm RAID system (on bootup, it seems) . I am alerted now, and will not use it in multiboot environment, does anybody have an idea which boot option could trigger a quiet format of a partition. Thanks, tikreen
PS Sorry wrong title please edit it someone; The Partition itself is not deleted, but the files and folders are.