And .... One thing to do is to add hard disk as a slave who has a Windows operating system itself equal to the boot. I've had to control a hard disk of an infected computer, adding it as an additional hard drive on a computer with the same Windows XP. When I booted, the system recognized the second drive but Windows has found just messing up the System Root modified by C to the disk D. When I removed the added disk, Windows does not allow me to Boot as the logon. Basically you do not understand the reason, the system root disk was that of the additional disk. I searched for hours for a solution, including the change in the records MountDevices, but I found it useful to run the command FDISK / MBR (which rebuilds the Windows Master Boot Record) from a bootable CD of Windows 98. Of course, I unplugged all the hard drive of your computer except the Boot. This fortunately allowed me to reconstruct the original systemroot, and sort things out without having to alter the registry or to reinstall Windows XP. If you arrive at a thing, the infected disk installed on a USB media houses and you'll be fine.
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