Create Recovery drive

I'm using HP ENVY TS 15-Q006TX with Windows 8.1 x64 
I have deleted the recovery partition along with everything it contained can how can i make a new partition and a new recovery image for a frsh windows install that came straight out of the box

It is a bit too late for that. You stated that you deleted the recovery partition.  That is what the HP recovery media creator would have used to create recovery media.
You can purchase recovery media from HP or an HP partner. the cost is minimal. It is normally @$25.00 USD.  Use the following link.
http://support.hp.com/us-en/document/bph07143
You may be able to recover the partition.  See the following Britec video
****Please click on Accept As Solution if a suggestion solves your problem. It helps others facing the same problem to find a solution easily****
2015 Microsoft MVP - Windows Experience Consumer

Similar Messages

  • USB drive only mounts as Local Drive Need it to mount as USB Drive to create recovery drive

    subject pretty much says it all.  Using an HP Sleekbook 15, it tells me to make recovery disk.  I opt for the USB drive option and buy a new Sandisk Cruze Glide.  Plugged it in.  Started Recovery program to make disk.  Program tells me to insert the USB drive or plugin my DVD burner.  I check the file explorer and find the USB drive is mounted as Local Drive E:.  No amount of inserting and removal will trigger the program to continue.
    Doc read on SanDisk forum implied this is a windows 8 compatibility issue where Win 8 requires new USB drives that meet Win 8 compatibility to mount as Local devices.
    I saw here that the USB drive MUST be a removable device inorder to be made bootable. 
    Help! this is inconsistant and negates the whole reason for using removable media if it can't be made to be seen as a boot recovery drive. 
    I need a solution, can those who know please advise.

    Not all USB 3.0 is Windows 8 compatible. It will have the compability logo on the back or front of the package.
    I have run across several interesting articles that mention Windows 8 can create the Recovery Drive with I assume any flash drive.
    http://lifehacker.com/5991431/how-to-create-a-recovery-flash-drive-for-windows-8-and-free-up-some-ha...
    http://www.techrepublic.com/blog/window-on-windows/create-a-recovery-drive-in-windows-8/7261
    ******Clicking the Thumbs-Up button is a way to say -Thanks!.******
    **Click Accept as Solution on a Reply that solves your issue to help others**

  • W541: Cannot boot from USB created with Windows 8 create recovery drive

    Hello, I have just bought a W541, and want to install the supplied Windows 8 on an m.2 SSD.I created the recovery drive on a USB following the instructions in the User Manual, but the recover image procedure under Advanced Options cannot find the USB.During the re-image step, it fails to find a drive with a valid image.I've confirmed using the command window available under the Advanced Options that the USB is mounted Searching these forums, I found the following, which describes a similar problem for a T540:https://forums.lenovo.com/t5/ThinkPad-W-Series-Laptops/Lenovo-W540-won-t-boot-from-USB-flash-drive-ThinkPad/m-p/1500902#M39097 This implies that the USB should first be formatted with FAT32 before use, which cannot work, since FAT32 only has a maximum 4 GB  partition, whereas when copied to the USB, the Windows 8 recovery drive occupies nearly 10 GB. Is it possible to specify the boot order from insde the BIOS? I could only find an entry under Security about UEFI boot enabling, nothing about the boot order. Can anyone help?Paul    

    Hello Z, thanks for the reply. I tried another USB drive, and created a recovery drive, as before.This time it was able to detect the presence of the drive when I tapped on the Enter key when starting up, followed by the F12 key.  However, there are still problems when I clicked through the options:Choose the languageChoose your keyboard layoutTroubleshootAdvanced optionsSystem Image Recovery At this point I am offered the option Windows 8.1.When I select this, it indicates it is scanning for system disks, and then displays the the pop-up window "Re-image your computer": "Windows cannot find a system image on this computer" Why does this happen if it detected that there was a Windows 8.1 installation on the USB? I've spent a whole day now on this. Luckily, if I can't solve it, the machine is new and I can send it back to Lenovo, and ask to have it re-imaged with the downgrade option to Windows 7.

  • How to create recovery disk for windows 8.1 after update from windows 8.

    My laptop came with windows 8 and i have recovery discs for windows 8.
    Now i've updated to windows 8.1, so i want to creat recovery discs for windows 8.1.
     So in future when i use recovery discs i dont have to download windows 8.1 again.
    Please tell me if there is any way to do this.....

    As colakid posted, in Windows 8 the ability to create a recovery CD/DVD has gone. Your options are to:
    create a recovery USB; or
    create a recovery image.
    Recovery USB
    Colakid's post talks you through how to make a recovery USB: from control panel, choose Recovery, then Create a Recovery Drive, and follow the prompts.
    However, the 'recovery USB' can be a bit misleading. When the wizard starts, there is an option to 'copy the recovery partition from the PC to the recovery drive'. If you do not check this option, you will still need installation media to reset your PC.
    Since you have upgraded from Windows 8 to Windows 8.1, you will probably not be able to check this option, as it will be greyed out (like it is in the picture in Colakid's post).
    If you go ahead and create the USB anyway, you will be able to boot to it, but you won't be able to reinstall Windows unless you have the installation media (or possibly a system image, though I haven't tried that).
    Recovery image
    The recovery image is an image of your computer that Windows will use when you select the 'refresh my pc' option. You can create a recovery image using the recimg.exe tool.
    First, open an elevated command prompt (type cmd and press Ctrl + Shift + Enter).
    Next, create the recovery image by typing:
    recimg /createimage [path]
    Where [path] is the folder you want the image in, eg C:\Recovery. You cannot set the file name - it will always be called CustomRefresh.wim.
    Let it run its course. When it's done, you can check that it is the current recovery image by typing
    recimg /showcurrent
    It's important to keep in mind what a recovery image contains. It will have your Windows system files (in their current state), and the desktop apps you have installed (so it makes sense to do this after a fresh install of Windows). It will
    not backup any Metro apps or user files, because these are not deleted during a system refresh. If you want a complete backup of everything on your computer the way it is now, you should make take a complete system image (which
    can be done from the File History settings in control panel - at the bottom left there will be a 'System Backup Image' option - or you can do it using any other backup software like Ghost or Acronis).
    In my case, I created the recover image straight after upgrading to Windows and it was about 6 GB.
    Prepare/Create and register an recovery partition, so the option Copy the Recovery Partition becomes available in the recovery drive UI  application.
    In elevated command run> RECIMG -CREATEIMAGE C:\REFRESHIMAGE< 
    This will create a new custom.wim in a folder Refreshimage.
    Now lets get ready to register the path of the image, so our create recovery drive option(COPY THE RECOVERY PARTITION FROM THE PC TO THE RECOVERY DRIVE) becomes available.
    >  In the folder you created there will be a> custom.wim<
    change it to>INSTALL.wim<
    > Create a folder In Cd/directory using Elevated command> mkdir c:\Win8.1-Recovery,>
    Win81-Recovery<.
    > Copy the  INSTALL.WIM. Put in the Win81-recovery folder created.
    > Run in elevated commad>REAGENTC /SetOSImage /Path C:\Win81-Recovery\INSTALL.WIM /Index 1<
    Do not copy the arrows if using copy and paste, that is my way of pointing out lines of code
    Information provided by the link below, thanks Keith. I simplified the process for easy following and added my own tweak from trial and error for the install.
    blogs.technet.com/b/keithmayer/a···ive.aspx

  • Creating recovery disc using DVD vs using USB

    I wanted to upgrade to SSD
    a crucial m500 to be exact.
    I'm using windows 8
    Lenovo T430
    But an attempt to create recovery media, I was told I needed a usb of at least 16gb before continuing.
    I personally do not have a spare 16gb thumbdrive lying around
    address : create a recovery drive, The screen which says "the drive must be able to hold 16gb, and everything on the drive will be deleted.
    and I find it such a waste to use a hard disk to use it as a recovery media considering the fact that all data on it has to be erased and I cant really use it for other purpose
    so I  google in attempt to try and create recovery drive using dvd disc
    recdisc.exe
    my question is that would I be able to restore the same original settings and applications as when I bought it when using the recdisc.exe method??
    will all the default Lenovo applications be still present??

    If it's like most of the recent ones I have seen it would normally require 3 regular DVD disks.  Recovery 1, Recovery 2, and Drivers and Applications Disk 2.  If you use Dual Layer it will put Recovery 1 and Recovery 2 on one DL disk and the Drivers and Applications on Disk 2, but it should give you the option of recording it to a standard DVD.  You can determine how many regular disks it would take by selecting the Regular Disk option prior to creating the disks and it shoud tell you 3. 
    I'm betting that when you check the first disk you will find that it has about 6.5 to 7gb of data on it and the drivers disk has about 3gig, more than what would fit on a single D/L dsk.  I know that my L305-S5933 is like that and I can't imagine that your's would be that much different.
    Addendum:  I just checked my 3 disks and they are as follows
    Recovery Disk 1 - 4.3 GB
    Recovery Disk 2 - 2.77 GB
    Drivers and Applications Disk 3 - 2.1 GB
    That totals 9.17 GB more than the capacity of a single D/L disk.
    Plus I believe that Chris hit the nail on the head of their wanting to keep the actual Recovery Disk(s) seperate from the Drivers & Applications disk.
    If you don't post your COMPLETE model number it's very difficult to assist you. Please try to post in complete sentences with punctuation, capitals, and correct spelling. Toshiba does NOT provide any direct support in these forums. All support is User to User in their spare time.

  • Can i delete my recovery drive and create a new one? (HP Envy m6 ko25dx)

    Hi, I have an HP envy m6 ko25dx that I had some issues upgrading from Windows 8 to 8.1. I was getting stuck at a black screen on start up. I had to contact HP support by phone and they ended up sending me a flash drive with factory recovery data. When I went through the process of getting my computer working again, one of the steps affected the recovery partition on drive D: to store the data from the flash drive in order to proceed. I finished the process and got my computer back to Windows 8. After completing that, I now have a problem. When clicking on file explorer, the D: drive shows as almost full but when I click on it to view files, it says "this folder is empty" . When I go to computer management-storage-disk management, I have 2 recovery drive D:'s. One shows NTFS for file system, while the other has a blank and they are both 11% free (89% full). Also, there are 3 other un-named volumes; 2 have a status of "healthy (recovery partitions)" and 1 has a status of "healthy (EFI system recovery)". Those un-named volumes are a total of 1,100 mb's (1.1 gb) and they are each 100% free. The only thing that shows when i right click all of those volumes, D and un-named, is help and when I click that, it is in fact, not helpful. When I right click the C: drive, it shows: open, explore, mark partition as active, etcetera... Is there a way for me to access and move the un-named volumes back to C:? And is there a way for me to delete the D: drive data and re-create the recovery data from this point?  A week ago I dared to try upgrading from 8 to 8.1. During the process it was recommended that I create a recovery set but was unable to so due to the full D: drive and the fact that i didn't have an external storage large enough. I decided to update the drivers and proceed without creating the recovery set or creating a volume large enough from the space I have on C:. When the computer was done with installing and updating everything it could, it got stuck on a black screen again, this time with the cursor and the ability to access the task manager with Ctrl+Alt+Del. I had to use that to manually download the Windows 8.1 drivers since it wasn't possible to do it from 8. 8.1 is now working. I keep getting warnings about D: being so full and I understand having a nearly full drive affects computer performance. If more information is needed, please let me know. Thanks for reading if you made it this far!
    This question was solved.
    View Solution.

    All the "drives" you see are part of Windows 8 and HP's factory installation. The recovery partition is designed to return the computer to a factory like state and nothing more. You cannot delete the D: drive "HP Recovery" partition and recreate an updated recovery image. The following image shows the factory installed partitions on my HP 13 Split x2;
    If you have any further questions, please don't hesitate to ask.
    Please click the White KUDOS "Thumbs Up" to show your appreciation
    Frank
    {------------ Please click the "White Kudos" Thumbs Up to say THANKS for helping.
    Please click the "Accept As Solution" on my post, if my assistance has solved your issue. ------------V
    This is a user supported forum. I am a volunteer and I don't work for HP.
    HP 15t-j100 (on loan from HP)
    HP 13 Split x2 (on loan from HP)
    HP Slate8 Pro (on loan from HP)
    HP a1632x - Windows 7, 4GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6130y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6320y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240
    HP p7-1026 - Windows 7, 6GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6787c - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240

  • Creating Recovery Media with Portable External Hard Drive

    Is it possible to create recovery data with a portable external hard drive?

    Hi,
    i am also facing the same problem not able to create the recovery media in external hard disk. win 7 64 bit..
    Please help there is an option to create recovery media in USB flash drive but its not recognising the usb even though its connected.
    Mahesh

  • Can't Create USB Recovery Drive after Win 8.1 upgrade on Lenovo Twist

    After upgrading to Win 8.1 and trying to create the usb recovery drive, I get this error:
    "We can't create a reccovery drive on this PC. Some required files are missing.To trouble shoot problems when your PC starts,use your window installation disk or media"
    Can some give me a hint as to how to solve this?Thx.
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    I contacted Lenovo who sent me out a set of 4 Recovery disks. These disks fixed the problem but it meant wiping out the hard drive and reinstalling very thing from scratch. A new recovery partition is created and the discs reinstalled Win 8 which had to be updated. Then Win 8.1 could be installed. Everything is now working as it should.

  • How to create up-to-date Recovery Drive and Recovery Partition on Windows 8.1 U1.

    I am running 8.1 and exploring the recovery options.
    I'm periodically creating recovery images, etc. but would like to do better than that.
    I'd like to know how to:
    Create an updated Recovery Partition that will restore to a Recovery Image (WIM) that I choose.
    Modify / Create a Recovery Drive that includes a system image
    of my choice, as opposed to an image created by the manufacturer / supplier (and the extra work that that implies).  If I can create an up to date partition and mark it as such, then I'm clearly done.  Should I not be able to sensibly
    make my own partition, how do I create this on a USB recovery drive?  (The built in interface has a Boolean option, use hard drive recovery partition OR use nothing.  This would be solved if it
    also had an option to use current recovery image.  I'm happy to write simple code to make this happen if that's what it takes.)
    Put another way.  I can make a recovery image at will, how do I create a recovery partition and recovery drive to match?
    I'm no expert on the ins and outs of Windows 8.1 recovery, if this is already covered elsewhere, I'd appreciate a link.

    I have documented an unsupported process for creating an automated recovery for use in a task sequence
    here. However, if I read your post correctly you are suggesting being able to do this from USB media. The method for creating the recovery partition is simple. It is simply a partition containing a folder called RecoveryImage with your install.wim
    inside. Reagentc is the tool that will actually tell Windows where that recovery is. While I don't personally have a use for what your suggesting, I may give it a shot just to see if it can be done. I suspect it will work.
    Here are the links that got me started:
    ReagentC:
    http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd799242(v=WS.10).aspx
    Creating Push Button Reset:
    http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/hh824917.aspx
    Good Luck!
    bill
    Regards, Bill Moore @BMooreAtDell

  • Creating a recovery drive for a K430 computer

    Hello-I have a K430 desktop computer with a1TB HDD,12 GB Memory and Win8 64 bits. I used a !TB Seagate USB Drive for C drive backup and a 2GB Flash drive for Personal Document backup. I created a HDD image backup and a backup of my personal documents using the Lenovo procedure.. I understand that I need either a WIN8 disk or Recovery drive to boot and re-install my image file.
    I am having problems creating a Recovery Drive. I formatted the drive to NTFS and verified that the Flash Drive was recognized by my computer. I searched for Recovery Drive.exe and it appeared. However, my flash drive did not appear on the Recovery window and the Next button remained greyed out. I will check and see if I have a recovery partition.Have you developed a fix for this problem? If so, please let me know. Thanks.
    Carl W Lesesne

    Updating Creating a recovery drive for a K430 Computer
    Hello-I obtained a copy of Microsoft's Windows  Create a USB recovery drive and discovered that I do not have a recovery partition. After entering recimg/showcurrent  in a command prompt, I received a message stating that there is no active custom recovery image.
    I attempted to create a recovery partition by entering mkdir C:\RefreshImage and recimg-Create C:\RefreshImage after the Command Prompt. This resulted in the following error message: recimg-createIMage is not recognized as an internal or external command. I have reported this problem to Microsoft also. If you are aware of a fix for this problem, please let me know. Thanks.
    Carl W Lesesne

  • Can't create a recovery drive: "Some required files are missing"

    Hi guys,
    Didn't have much luck in MS forums, maybe somebody here knows?
    Whenever I try to create a recovery drive I find that "We can't create a recovery drive on this PC. Some required files are missing. To troubleshoot problems when your PC can't start, use your Windows installation disc or media."
    Uh?
    Is a fresh Windows 8 x64 (RTM) installation. Only thing that I can think of is it has UEFI and Secure Boot enabled.
    If I helped you, please give me some kudos! ^^

    Hey there dann,
    What version of Windows 8 are you using? It appears you may need to the Window 8 disc to be able to create the recovery drive because it needs files that are not on your system. I found those part numbers for the Windows 8 recovery media for you.
    04T7196 - Win 8 64 Bit US
    04T7223 - Win 8 Pro 64 Bit US
    Additional part numbers can be found here for all system parts and recovery media for you the Twist (s230u). If you contact service back they should be able to get the media sent to you. Good Luck.
    Did someone help you today? Press the star on the left to thank them with a Kudo!
    If you find a post helpful and it answers your question, please mark it as an "Accepted Solution".! This will help the rest of the Community with similar issues identify the verified solution and benefit from it.

  • Wy won't my mac create an external recovery drive?

    I am trying to Create an external recovery drive on a USB stick.When I tried to install the application recovery disk assistant, I get this error message:
    The recovery HD on this  computer is damaged or not present.
    Why do I get this message and what do I have to do to fix it? I did used recovery mode on this computer many times.

    learn something new every day
    then i guess it goes back to the original error, it doesn't like something about your recovery partition so, afaik, the only way to fix the HD recovery partition would be a clean install of OSX
    but step back, why do you need recovery on an external drive? why not just create a [whatever OSX you want] installer yourself. this encompasses all the recovery functions plus allows you to reinstall the OS as well.

  • Question about swapping Hard-Drive​s/Creating Recovery Discs

    I have a laptop, Toshiba Satellite C655-S5082, with Windows 7 Home Premium 64-Bit OEM Operating System already installed on it so it did NOT come with an Installation or Recovery disc.
    My problem here is two-fold... First I would like to change the hardware on the PC by changing Hard-Drives from the one that came with the laptop to a large capacity one however since the laptop came with the Operating System already installed onto it I can not install it onto the new Hard-Drive (which for all further purposed we will call Hard-Drive B) now I thought that I could create the recovery discs using Toshiba's Recovery Media Center to create the 4 DVDs however I do not even know if this will help at all since Hard-Drive B does not have a recovery partition on it.
    This however is where my second problem comes into play, when I try to create the recovery discs using the Recovery Media Center I insert the DVD and begin the burning process, however about 75% of the way through the first disc the program slows down and a window pops up asking me if I would like to open the disc with Windows Explorer as if it has just recognized the disc again, I exit out of this and it comes up a few minutes later with an error code of 020150-20-0000000 and a message stating it can not read a file located within the ZZImages directory and then crashes, freezes and I have to end the process via the Task Manager then eject the disc via Windows Explorer 'My Computer' link.
    As you can see my problem is two fold so my questions to the Toshiba Support Team/Administration are...
    1. If I insert the new HDD into the laptop and begin using the recovery discs created via the Recovery Media Center will it be able to install the OS to that HDD and allow the OEM Product Key to be used to verify the OS?
    2. If I can do the above process how do I fix the Recovery Media Center application from crashing and effectively ruining my DVD's, so that I may create the proper recovery dics?
    3. If I can't do the above process due to the Recovery Partitions not being located on that new Hard Drive is there a way to copy and or transfer that Recovery Partition to the new Hard Drive so that the recovery discs do work?
    4. If neither of the above processes work will Toshiba be willing to send me a Windows 7 Home Premium 64-Bit OEM Installation disc via the mail or the .iso/.img file of the disc via e-mail so that I may burn them to a disc myself and install the OS onto the new Hard Drive?
    I do have the appropriate Product ID/Product Key for the OEM OS as well as the Serial Number of the specific laptop itself. Please get back to me as soon as possible. Thank you!

    Satellite C655-S5082 
    create the recovery discs ... comes up a few minutes later with an error code
    This sometimes occurs because of the media. Try using a disc from a different source.
    Follow the instructions in the section Creating recovery DVDs/media, which begins on p. 68 of the User's Guide.
       Satellite C640/C650 Series User’s Guide 
    I do not even know if this will help at all since Hard-Drive B does not have a recovery partition on it
    It doesn't make any difference what's on hard drive B. All of it will be replaced.
    For this, see the section Restoring from recovery DVDs/media, which begins on p. 71 of the User's Guide. You want to recover to "out-of-box state."
    After you have restored to the new hard disk, it will contain everything that the original had, including even all the recovery partitions. So you will even be able to burn recovery discs again from the new hard drive.
    ..the OEM Product Key
    The version of Windows which is restored (not installed) to the new hard drive is pre-activated. You won't need to fool around with the product key.
    ..will Toshiba be willing to send me a Windows 7 Home Premium 64-Bit OEM Installation disc
    If all else fails, you can always order recovery discs from Toshiba directly.
       Order Toshiba Recovery Media
    Your questions indicate that you do not understand the procedure above. If my explanation is insufficient, please feel free to ask for clarification.
    questions to the Toshiba Support Team/Administration
    One more thing. There are no Toshiba support folks here. We are all users just like you.
    -Jerry

  • Twist - Create a recovery drive.

    I'm trying to create a recovery drive on the Twist I just received but, when I go to do so I receive the following error:
    "We can't create a recovery drive on this PC
    Some required files are missing. To troubleshoot problems when your PC can't start, use your Windows installation disc or media"
    The computer did not come with recovery media but has recovery partitions that aren't assigned drive letters. I called support and told them it wouldn't work and they didn't even try to troubleshoot. Instead they attempted to look up a part number for the recovery discs, which they could not find. Has anyone else run into this or a similar problem?
    I'm also not able to even create a repair disc, when I attempt to do so I receive the following error:
    Windows was unable to parse the requested XML data.

    Hey there dann,
    What version of Windows 8 are you using? It appears you may need to the Window 8 disc to be able to create the recovery drive because it needs files that are not on your system. I found those part numbers for the Windows 8 recovery media for you.
    04T7196 - Win 8 64 Bit US
    04T7223 - Win 8 Pro 64 Bit US
    Additional part numbers can be found here for all system parts and recovery media for you the Twist (s230u). If you contact service back they should be able to get the media sent to you. Good Luck.
    Did someone help you today? Press the star on the left to thank them with a Kudo!
    If you find a post helpful and it answers your question, please mark it as an "Accepted Solution".! This will help the rest of the Community with similar issues identify the verified solution and benefit from it.

  • Create Recovery Media Windows 8 without USB drive

    Hi,
    I recently bought a T530 with Windows 8 pre-installed. I want to create recovery disc(s). However, in the "Create a recovery media" wizard, I don't have the option of selecting DVDs if tick the option "Copy the recovery partition to the media". I have a bunch of DVDs lying around and I would like to use them. Not to mention that I don't intend to buy USB drive just for this purpose.
    Any help is appreciated.
    Thank you,
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    Hi egrivel,
    As stated above, there is no option to create optical recovery media.  You can use a flash drive.  8G 16G I believe, but verify that when running the utility.  Make sure "copy the recovery partition" is checked.
    Methodology to create Recovery Media and reload a Lenovo system with Microsoft Windows 8 preload
    Z.
    [edit] 16G flash drive size.
    The large print: please read the Community Participation Rules before posting. Include as much information as possible: model, machine type, operating system, and a descriptive subject line. Do not include personal information: serial number, telephone number, email address, etc.  The fine print: I do not work for, nor do I speak for Lenovo. Unsolicited private messages will be ignored. ... GeezBlog
    English Community   Deutsche Community   Comunidad en Español   Русскоязычное Сообщество

Maybe you are looking for

  • Material Determination based on Availability

    Hi SD gurus, I have a client requirement as below: We create order via BAPI. Data comes from ext call center system. Whenever Matnr A is entered in Sales order & it is not available then Matnr B should come. 1: I know that we can handle this in Mater

  • Latest dvd project won't play in DVD players...

    I have a iMac G5 and iDVD 4. I use FCP to edit. I have made many DVDs from files I make with exporting my sequences to quicktime. Then I import that export into iDVD, and this has always created DVDs that play in my computer and in DVD players. For s

  • One message type different IDoc Types

    Hi All, Can we use one message type and different data types based on the requirement in PI mapping.Basically  I want to select mappings based on IDoc ...My requirement is to use different IDoc types for one message type in mapping ...will it work ?

  • Removing excess spacing

    I work for my school newspaper as the Online Editor. The editors use InDesign to layout their articles and when they adjust the type to make the text fit into the columns appropriately, they simply hit the space bar multiple times (it's either that o

  • Performance increases noticed?

    Hi. I have been reading that Leopard now takes better advantage of the Intel dual core processors and thus we owners of Macs with this processor type should see some increase in performance if we move from Tiger to Leopard. Has anybody noticed such a