Corrupt Files




Word :   Username :  
 
Bottom
Author
 Thread : Corrupt Files
 
Ed
Profile: stranger
More Information

Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware (More info?)

 

My problem is that my JPG files are getting corrupt on my
A: drive. I've ran, "Norton, McAfee, Zone Alarm,
Spysweeper, and KazzarBegone" but neither is resolving
this problem. I've even purchased a new floppy drive and
still have the same problem. When I first copy the
pictures to a newly formated floppy and view the
pictures, they are fine. The problem begins only when I
remove the floppy from the drive and reinsert it. Then no
matter what viewer I choose, some of the JPG file are
corrupt and distorted. Sometimes some of the corrupt file
correct themselve after I remove the floppy and reinsert
it again. I've ran chkdsk also and no problem was found
with this utility. I think this problem began when I
upgraded my OS from Win98 to WinXP but I'm not sure of
it. I'm a novice user, can you help me?

Thank You,

Ed

Related Product

Register or log in to remove.

Profile: stranger
More Information

Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware (More info?)

 

Have you tried using a different floppy disk?

Profile: journeyman
More Information

Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware (More info?)

 

Yes I did. Still didn't work.
>-----Original Message-----
>Have you tried using a different floppy disk?
>.
>

More Information

Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware (More info?)

 

Can the jpgs that you write to floppy be read/viewed successfully on
another computer? Are you having any problems reading disks you (or
someone else) wrote previously? One of the problems with sorting out
floppy read/write problems is that Windows OSes since 98 cache floppy
disks in such a way that you cannot reliably know whether a file was
written correctly without ejecting and reinserting the disk. If you
write a file to a floppy and then immediately read it back, you do not
actually read anything from the floppy (if you are observant, you will
notice that the file appears too fast and the floppy is not accessed).
Even using Copy /V from the command line does not bypass the cache.
You can have an almost totally unwriteable (because damaged) floppy
disk, and, provided that the boot and directory sectors are readable
and valid, you will be able to "write" to it, and then "read back"
what you "wrote" - only when you eject it and reinsert it (thus
clearing the cache) will you find that your file wasn't really saved.
If changing the drive has not helped, I would suspect either a bad
batch of disks (you can get these - even from good mfrs) or a bad
floppy controller (on the motherboard).

On Tue, 15 Jun 2004 10:25:51 -0700, "Ed"
<anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:

>My problem is that my JPG files are getting corrupt on my
>A: drive. I've ran, "Norton, McAfee, Zone Alarm,
>Spysweeper, and KazzarBegone" but neither is resolving
>this problem. I've even purchased a new floppy drive and
>still have the same problem. When I first copy the
>pictures to a newly formated floppy and view the
>pictures, they are fine. The problem begins only when I
>remove the floppy from the drive and reinsert it. Then no
>matter what viewer I choose, some of the JPG file are
>corrupt and distorted. Sometimes some of the corrupt file
>correct themselve after I remove the floppy and reinsert
>it again. I've ran chkdsk also and no problem was found
>with this utility. I think this problem began when I
>upgraded my OS from Win98 to WinXP but I'm not sure of
>it. I'm a novice user, can you help me?
>
>Thank You,
>
>Ed


Please respond to the Newsgroup, so that others may benefit from the exchange.
Peter R. Fletcher


----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==----
http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! >100,000 Newsgroups
---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =---

Ed
Profile: stranger
More Information

Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware (More info?)

 

Thanks for the reply.
I tried reading the floppy on my laptop and images are
distorted. I will check and see if it's the floppy
controller.

>-----Original Message-----
>Can the jpgs that you write to floppy be read/viewed
successfully on
>another computer? Are you having any problems reading
disks you (or
>someone else) wrote previously? One of the problems with
sorting out
>floppy read/write problems is that Windows OSes since 98
cache floppy
>disks in such a way that you cannot reliably know whether
a file was
>written correctly without ejecting and reinserting the
disk. If you
>write a file to a floppy and then immediately read it
back, you do not
>actually read anything from the floppy (if you are
observant, you will
>notice that the file appears too fast and the floppy is
not accessed).
>Even using Copy /V from the command line does not bypass
the cache.
>You can have an almost totally unwriteable (because
damaged) floppy
>disk, and, provided that the boot and directory sectors
are readable
>and valid, you will be able to "write" to it, and
then "read back"
>what you "wrote" - only when you eject it and reinsert it
(thus
>clearing the cache) will you find that your file wasn't
really saved.
>If changing the drive has not helped, I would suspect
either a bad
>batch of disks (you can get these - even from good mfrs)
or a bad
>floppy controller (on the motherboard).
>
>On Tue, 15 Jun 2004 10:25:51 -0700, "Ed"
><anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
>
>>My problem is that my JPG files are getting corrupt on
my
>>A: drive. I've ran, "Norton, McAfee, Zone Alarm,
>>Spysweeper, and KazzarBegone" but neither is resolving
>>this problem. I've even purchased a new floppy drive and
>>still have the same problem. When I first copy the
>>pictures to a newly formated floppy and view the
>>pictures, they are fine. The problem begins only when I
>>remove the floppy from the drive and reinsert it. Then
no
>>matter what viewer I choose, some of the JPG file are
>>corrupt and distorted. Sometimes some of the corrupt
file
>>correct themselve after I remove the floppy and reinsert
>>it again. I've ran chkdsk also and no problem was found
>>with this utility. I think this problem began when I
>>upgraded my OS from Win98 to WinXP but I'm not sure of
>>it. I'm a novice user, can you help me?
>>
>>Thank You,
>>
>>Ed
>
>
>Please respond to the Newsgroup, so that others may
benefit from the exchange.
>Peter R. Fletcher
>
>
>----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-
Secure Usenet News==----
>http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the
World! >100,000 Newsgroups
>---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total
Privacy via Encryption =---
>.
>



Go to:
 

Google Ads
Ad
News

Dutch researchers create RFID malware

Published on March 15, 2006

Pranksters and criminals can infect RFID chips with computer viruses, worms and malware to cause major disruption at places where the popular tracking technology is used, according to new research by a group of European scientists. Read more

CMS shipping "one-step backup" software for media files

Published on October 13, 2005

CMS Products is currently shipping their "copy2go-Xpress" software that promises to search and backup your media files on the hard-drive. Hard-drive capacities have grown tremendously in the last year and some consumers are having a hard time keeping track of their many JPGs, MP3s or movie files. Copy2go-Xpress allows users to search the entire drive for different media types: photos, music, or video and then back the files to another drive or over the network. Read more

Iowa ISP wins $11.2 Billion dollar judgment against spammers

Published on January 05, 2006

A small Iowa-based ISP has been awarded a huge $11.2 billion dollar judgment against a Florida spammer. CIS Internet Services in Clinton Iowa sued James McCalla of Florida for sending 280 million email messages into the CIS network. Since 1996, the CIS network was a conduit for McCalla's emails which contained spoofed return information. Read more

Concern grows over Kama Sutra computer virus

Published on January 31, 2006

A destructive worm posing as a pornographic e-mail may already have infected hundreds of thousands of computers and could erase many everyday files on February 3, security experts warned on Tuesday. Read more

Latest Reviews & Articles

Stalker: Clear Sky--Is Your System Ready?

Published on September 30, 2008

Thinking about picking up the latest update to Stalker, but not sure if your graphics subsystem can handle it? Hang on as we take you through a performance tour and demonstrate how the game has been prettied up. Read more

Part 4: Avivo HD vs. PureVideo HD

Published on September 29, 2008

The 780G chipset/Radeon HD 3200 and the MCP78S chipset/GeForce 8200 provide the first integrated graphics solutions that can accelerate Blu-ray playback. We dig deep into how well they work with high-quality Blu-ray 1080p video playback. Read more

Four GeForce 9600 GT Cards Compared

Published on September 26, 2008

Manufacturers really love the first Geforce 9. The graphic chip is fast, the cards are inexpensive, and some retailers offer more than ten variations. Read more

Maxtor's Shared Storage Does NAS At Home

Published on September 25, 2008

What do you do with all the data you collect at home? Network attached storage is the solution. We test Maxtor's Shared Storage II and find that it is also suitable for use in small businesses. Read more