this computer's battery is working very poorly... when you don't touch the machine in a while and come back you have to press on/off button to get it going again (and have to log back in..) at least that's how it's set up, I suppose... remember, it's not my machine..
That does not indicate a bad battery. The computer is configured to sleep when inactive for a period of time, and the on/off button is configured to wake it up. That's normal. If it falls asleep too quickly the time period before it sleeps can be changed, but that's not your main problem right now.
ok.. I just looked again..
the programs (MS Office...) are there.. don't know why I didn't see it yesterday
(why is there a Programs Files/ and a Programs File(x86)??
and the programs appear in both of these folders... why is this..)
It is a 64-bit version of Windows. Programs written for 32bit OS's get installed into the latter folder (x86 indicates 32-bit), whereas native 64-bit programs get installed into the Programs folder... and some programs load info into both folders. You don't need to be concerned about that either though.
why is there a "Documents" folder and a "My Documents" folder.. for people who don't know how to organize their data files this is not pratical at all.. as they usu. have half their stuff in one folder and half in another... oh well.....
The My Documents and Documents folders are created by Windows. The OS organizes things a certain way, automatically putting certain data certain places unless the user overrides it. No worries there either.
so now all that's missing is her data files.... is there a way to recover those?
The data files are not missing, but unless logged into her profile, they will not show up as this is a privacy feature. I know you believe you ARE signing into her acct or profile, but the "welcome to your new computer" popup is a dead giveaway you are not, or the profile is corrupt.
The reason you don't want to use the Recovery manager is if it restores the computer it will restore it to how it was when brand new, meaning no programs or data anymore.
As posted above, sounds like it is trying to set up a new user profile.
yes, but, as mentioned, her account is still there.. I was able to log into her acct w/the same pswd as before.....
But something is rotten in Denmark or you wouldn't be having these problems.
Do you know how to log into the acct with admin privileges? Every Windows OS has a default admin acct with admin priv's. I'd recommend logging into that, then trying the following but it requires some know-how as it involves editing the Windows registry. The following suggestion was cut/pasted from
here for solving a similar problem of a corrupted profile.
---PASTE---
There is a better way to fix the immediate problem. You can do this under your own user ID if you have administrative privileges:
- Run REGEDIT
- Navigate to "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\ProfileList"
- You should find your profile key, with another named identically except for a ".bak" extension
- Delete the "normally named" key
- Rename the ".bak" named key to remove the ".bak" extension
- Restart your machine
If you
do not have administrative privileges, you will need to fist sign on with a user ID that does.
This will allow you to preserve all of the customization you "lost" without having to recreate everything. I have to do this at home all of the time. [...] Executing the fix above always brings the desktop back.
... by
Dmitry Bond Friday, October 12, 2012 7:53 AM
--- END PASTE ---
Before trying the above you might just pop into
Control Panel -> User Accounts ... and look at the user acct... see if anything looks amiss. Click on
Manage Another Account and see if any other accts are listed... maybe a dupe that's screwing things up. This is also where you can log into the native Admin acct.
OR.... it would be even easier to use Carmello's plan above, but not everyone has the recovery console installed, so I'd suggest (since you can boot into Windows anyway), going to
Control Panel -> Recovery -> click the
Open System Restore button. Check the little box that says "
Show more restore points" and look for a restore point that is dated PRIOR to this problem occurring.
(If System Restore is not enabled on her machine, there will not be any restore points available and this option is dead.) If there IS an older restore point, select it and follow the instructions, letting the machine reboot as needed to restore to the earlier point.
If that works great. If not, you might try the above to fix the corrupted profile.