Or not...
Over the last 20 years I have developed a kind of feel for what goes wrong with your pc and what does not. Sadly that does not mean I can access that "feeling" immediately when something goes wrong.
So when my laptop declined to start and Windows offered to "fix" it (very kind of Windows8 to do that), it was failing. I went through the usual suspects, blinded by the fact that I could not get into the error log and see what Windows thought was wrong.
After increasingly destructive attempts to get my Windows alive again, I took a step back and thought about it. Nothing and I do mean absolutely NOTHING was working.
Now, of course, that should have twigged much earlier. Regardless of it's bad press, Windows, from XP onwards, is actually an extremely robust system which will try almost everything to get you going again.
Except when there is a hardware failure.
So, after a thought finally entered my head, I went to discover the fault. One thing I know is that Windows won't try and fix errors on the hard drive. I can understand this even if I don't agree with it. In severe cases it can do more damage than good. But, then again, in severe cases 99.9999% of people are not going to pay thousands of £ to recover their business critical data.
So I booted, yet again, into the windows repair tools and asked it to scan my C drive for errors.
12 hours later it reported that it had finished, that the 2 year old SSD had 80 faulty clusters and that it had fixed them.
Now the really deep techie stuff. Windows had "helpfully" tried to "refresh" my Windows8 installation 3 times. Fortunately it kept all 3 backups of the old system. I had to use a Linux live boot cd (Windows repair refused to move the directories), so that I could put everything back where it belonged.
I could have just restarted the machine and asked Windows to sort it out, but that's just asking for trouble. Windows8 has a "refresh install" feature in the repair tool set. OK I have to reinstall my apps, but my windows settings and documents remain. I chose that option.
Now I'm faced with the tedious journey of installing my apps again. But, then again, I get rid of all the junk I had installed for one time things.
Microsoft gets bad press, but Windows did almost everything in it's power to recover my machine. In the end it allowed me to get back what I had built before in a clean and fresh state so I could start on messing it up all over again.
+1 to Microsoft. But this is the second time my 2 year old SSD has failed and I'm becoming concerned that I'm going to have to start treating them like the old 1990's hard drives. i.e. back everything up for the guaranteed failure. It has been a long time since I felt I could not rely on hardware to keep most if not all of my data.
Now my purchase of that 1TB SSD is looking like a future thing. Trust is a hard won thing and it's just gone out the window.
And I need to go find the synaptics mouse driver so I can stop the trackpad throwing the cursor all over the place and selecting and deleting my text when I type.....