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MCSA/MCSE Self-Paced Training Kit (Exam 70-270): Installing ...

MCSA/MCSE Self-Paced Training Kit (Exam 70-270): Installing ...

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Lesson Summary<br />

Lesson 4 Using System Restore<br />

18-31<br />

■ System Restore works by creating restore points that contain a snapshot of the<br />

Registry (which includes user account, application, and hardware configuration)<br />

and a copy of certain system files that Windows XP Professional requires for startup.<br />

System Restore creates restore points automatically when certain events<br />

occur, and you can also create restore points manually.<br />

■ System Restore is enabled by default in Windows XP Professional to monitor all<br />

drives on the computer. You can disable System Restore entirely or you can disable<br />

it on any particular drive. You cannot disable System Restore on the system<br />

drive without disabling it on all drives.<br />

■ You should create a restore point manually if you are about to perform any major<br />

action, such as installing or removing an application, installing a new hardware<br />

device, or troubleshooting a problem.<br />

■ Windows provides access to restore points in a convenient date-based display.<br />

When you restore to a restore point, Windows must restart so that it can apply<br />

configuration changes.

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