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What Would You Put Into A Software Survival Kit?

LosManos asks: "A call for help to the Everyday Heroes that are out there: I have just returned from a 4 months scientific expedition to some of the more remote parts of the South Pacific. As soon as people we met found out that I was a computer guy they asked me to help them and all to often I had to reply that I didn't have the tools.This got me thinking; what should a software toolbox consist of? OS, patches, digital books, compilers, sniffers, servers, harddisk restore apps...? Please remember that the computers I met where often old and slow. The answers to this could be interesting also when you are not several days away from nearest inhabited island. I mean, what is it that most often break? How is it usually fixed? Are more fancy solutions more error prone?" If you were to create a "first aid kit" consisting of CDs, disks, books and other technical utilities you have used to resurrect dead systems, what would you put in it?

"So far I have found:

  • A utility for reading and repairing hard disks
  • 'regmon' and 'filemon' from Sysinternals
  • Video drivers (but I don't know which)
  • A diskette for booting MSDOS with CD support
  • Digital books (but I don't know which)
  • Remote controlling tools, such as VNC
  • CDs with OS (but there are hundreds of those)"

9 of 538 comments (clear)

  1. Some resources I have found useful by dtolton · · Score: 5, Informative

    M$ Boot Disks
    If you have to build a boot disk for a M$ machine, putergeek is
    invaluable since M$ doesn't seem to want to you to boot to a DOS
    prompt any more. You can find Win95B, WinME and Dos Bootdisks.
    http://www.putergeek.com/downloads/

    RegClean
    If you do any development using COM or ActiveX components then
    RegClean is a must have tool for fixing registry problems.
    http://download.com.com/3000-2094-88147 0.html?tag= list

    PsTools
    Listed in the Article are FileMon and RegMon from
    Sysinternals.com, but I would add PsTools to that list. This
    suite of tools is incredibly useful for diagnosing and solving a
    vast array of problems. PsKill is probably my most frequently
    used tool when I need to actually KILL a process instead of
    politely requesting it to exit via End Task.
    Oh and nearly everything works on remote machines as well.
    http://www.sysinternals.com/ntw2k/freeware/ pstools .shtml

    MDAC Utility
    If you have to deal with programs accessing a variety of
    Microsoft Data Access sources, the MDAC Component Checker is
    essential. It's unbelievable to me how typical it is that MDAC
    get's corrupted.
    www.microsoft.com/data

    Unfortunately, most of the essential tools relate to Microsoft
    Software, but the reality is that it seems to be more difficult
    to find "good" utilities to trouble shoot and fix problems under
    a Microsoft OS than pretty much any other OS I've worked on.
    Microsoft also publishes a tool that will automatically identify
    any known security vulnerabilites that need to be patched, but I
    can't find the link off hand. Again for a Microsoft OS it is
    pretty handy.

    --

    Doug Tolton

    "The destruction of a value which is, will not bring value to that which isn't." -John Galt
  2. Google Search results: by mark_space2001 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Linux Rescue fits on a floppy.

    There's also a good summary page of rescue discs that are available. Didn't look at windows specifically but I have used this to mount and fix various FAT type partitions. NTFS may be a slightly different animal.

  3. F.I.R.E. link by SHEENmaster · · Score: 5, Informative

    here is FIRE

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
  4. Back in the day... by zandermander · · Score: 5, Informative

    I was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Thailand back in the mid 90's and was often asked to "look" at someone's computer.

    With computers so expensive and knowledge about them so rare, these people were usually VIPs - the governor of the province, dean of a local university, important businesspeople... It behooved me to scratch their back so that they'd later help me.

    Now remember, this was when Windows '95 was still brand new and a lot of people in Thailand still used DOS. CDROMs weren't in widespread use yet (I think if anything, the CDROM built Panthip Plaza - a bootleggers heaven!)

    I found myself carrying around a complete set of MSDOS 6.22 disks, a Win95 CDROM and a couple of custom made boot disks - with things like FDISK, SCANDISK and such on them as well as a few floppies with common drivers on them.

    Biggest hardware problem I saw on a regular basis was floppy and CD drives crapping out due to the dust in the air and, of course, moldy floppies (110 degrees F and 100% humidity will grow mold on ANYTHING that doesn't move and a lot of things that do!)

    Ah, those were the days...

  5. RegClean is dangerous to use in 2K and XP. by antdude · · Score: 5, Informative

    Use jv16 PowerTools. It is better and with more features! Console, analyzer, etc.

    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
  6. They call me XTreeMan! by Glonoinha · · Score: 5, Informative

    Lions and tigers and bears ... oh my!

    Honestly though :

    Boot disks - make an emergency boot disk in Windows98. This thing makes a 2M RAMdrive, copies enough utils to jumpstart any computer, and CD drivers for every computer that can run 98 (which is pretty much all of them still running today.) I recommend this on a 3.5" floppy and also create a bootable CD using this as the boot image.

    XTGold 2.0 or 2.5 - runs on DOS
    ZTree 1.41 - in case they have a Windows environment 95 or higher running. Doesn't run in DOS but doesn't puke when the hard drive has more than 10,000 files on it.

    McAfee Virus Scan, command line version.

    --
    Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
    1. Re:They call me XTreeMan! by El+Jynx · · Score: 5, Informative

      A few other absolute musts (yeah yeah they're DOS :P):

      - DosDiag - great tool for checking your hardware. Simple, safe, and loaded. http://www.5star-shareware.com/Utilities/Diagnosti cs/bcm-diagnostics.html
      - Memtest86 or similar - for when you don't believe your kids when they say they didn't open the computer. http://www.memtest86.com/
      - The new FDisk for large partitions.
      - OpenOffice. Ye wouldn't believe how many poeple have illegal office installed - and are screwed when they crash. http://www.openoffice.org/
      - Hard disk checking utilities from Maxtor, Seagate etcetera.
      - Mozilla's Phoenix browser. http://www.mozilla.org/projects/phoenix/
      - Mozilla. (Get those people AWAY from virusfriendly Outlook!) http://www.mozilla.org/
      - Undelete. People are clumsy, stupid animals and you know it. A good and free version can be found at http://home.arcor.de/christian_grau/rescue/
      - Antivirus. http://www.free-av.com is a good one.
      - The Win98 cabs.
      - A pack of coffee.
      - A LOT of fewkin' patience.

      That's my toolkit at current. My company does this for a living ;)

      - Jynx

      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it well worth the effort.
  7. Soup by SoupIsGood+Food · · Score: 5, Informative

    Survival Gear for Macheads:

    System Software:

    MacOS X Jaguar install disks
    MacOS 9.2 install disk.
    MacOS 8.1 install disk (for Oooold hardware)
    System 7.1 boot floppy (for really, really old hardware.)

    Software Utilities:

    Alsoft DiskWarrior
    Norton Utilities for Mac
    Norton Antivirus
    Retrospect

    Hardware:

    Apple-branded Firewire emergency backup and restore device (Or as we like to call it when not adding it to our equipment req: the iPod.) Go for the big one, you'll be glad you had it when you need to rescue your data from a flaky powerbook. Use Retrospect to make sure you get everything backed up proper.

    Firewire to SCSI adapter (for getting data to and from older Macs.)

    If you're going to dealing with real old Macs: AAUI dongle, phone-net adapters, Mini DIN 8 to DB24 and DB9 serial cables.

    Unix Survival Kit:

    Hardware:

    Powerbook or iBook, with aforementioned Firewire SCSI adapter, USB serial adapter and a nice terminal emu program.

    SCSI external HDD

    Bunch 'o SCSI adapters/cables/testers

    A SCSI CDROM... if you deal with Sun equipment, make sure it's able to boot a SPARC box.

    Software:

    Install CDs for your Unix flavors of choice.
    CDs with the most current OS patch levels on it, one per OS.
    Another CD with your customized dot files, shell scripts and all the useful stuff you really wished came with your vendor's Unix, but didn't (GNU).

    NetBSD install CDs "for when all else fails." Comes in handy when you need to repurpose an old Motorola VME system previously installed with telco switching software to interface with lab monitoring hardware with shell scripts, a serial port and a prayer.

    Documentation:

    Unix System Administrator's Handbook on CD.
    A copy of the "Fixing Solaris" howto in .TXT.

    Linux Kit:

    Mac Powerbook or iBook, haughty sneer.

    Software:

    Slackware to inspire feeling of inadequacy in self proclaimed Linux gurus. Gentoo Level 3 on a USB keychain drive... especially usefull if you're stuck with a 2400 baud modem in a jungle where the pbone only works for three hours alternating tuesdays. (Ah, sarcasm!)

    Copy of NetBSD or OpenBSD install disks to get real work done.

    Windows Survival Kit:

    Hardware:

    Powerbook or iBook

    Software:

    Condescending sneer.

    SoupIsGood Food

  8. Field Engineer by Stargoat · · Score: 5, Informative
    I used to be a field engineer, so I hope I know what I'm talking about.

    It sounds like what you're going to be taking with you is a CD holder that holds about a dozen CDs, and maybe a few floppy disks. A little bit of hardware won't hurt either, but I'll try to keep it to fitting in a medium sized pocket.

    You're going to want:
    Windows 95c
    This is a good version of Windows 95.
    Windows 98se
    This is the OS that most people in small business are still using. It's the best of the Windows 9x series. You'll find that it could come in right handy.
    Windows NT
    You never know when you'll come across it.
    Windows 2000
    A lot of people are using this product. It's not bad, and the repair utility can be nice.
    NOT Windows XP
    No real reason to carry this around. Most people who have their XP machines should still have their restore disks.
    Office 97 Pro
    Most small business are still using this
    Office 2000 Pro
    This is a better product that Office 97 Pro. Sometimes comes in handy when you just cannot fix Office 97 Pro
    Norton Ghost
    When a small business buys PCs, they tend to buy two or three at once. This means that you can just drop a copy of a good build onto a bad build. It saves a lot of time.
    Norton Antivirus
    It's a good thing to have. You can use it as a bootable CDROM to search for viruses on a PC.
    Partition Magic
    It's also a good thing to have. It can save you work when someone has set up a PC foolishly.
    Your own utilities disk
    You're going to want to get a CDR and put the following on it: WinZip, Novell Client, Adobe Reader, Various Microsoft Office Readers, Possibly AOL, Sun's Java, Microsoft's VM, WinAmp, Possibly RealPlayer, Quicktime. Recent versions of MDAC. You get the idea.

    You're also going to want four or five 3.5" floppies.

    Windows 98 bootable disk.
    This comes in very handy.
    Dos 6.22 Utilities Bootable Disk
    Not quite as handy as the 98 disk, as it doesn't handle FAT32
    Two Blank Diskettes
    For Ghost to use during TCP/IP operations

    As for hardware, we'll make it easy. You'll want 2 older Intel Pro/100 NICs. These things are beautiful.

    You'll also want a cross over CAT-5 cable to make ghosting easier.

    A good leatherman wouldn't hurt either, but a small toolkit would be best. Those leathermens just aren't very good screwdrivers.

    --
    Hoist Number One and Number Six.