Well, like the title says, I b0rked it.
My contract ended at my previous job, so I'm job hunting, and more importantly, I had to give back my laptop. No Laptop means no FreeBSD, means no programming environment for me. So....
When I went to reinstall FreeBSD on my desktop here at home, so I could have a programming environment I liked again, I screwed up and overwrote my boot sector with the FreeBSD boot loader. That let me boot my FreeBSD partitions, but not my Win2k partitions. When I went and fixed the boot sector, I basically screwed up and lost access to all my partitions.
Today, after a reinstall of Win2k, I'm able to boot properly to both my FreeBSD and Win2k partitions, I just seem to have misplaced the partitions that had all my 3d stuff and all my mp3s. I'm slowly recovering important things from hither and yon, but its going to be a while, so it may be a good long time before I'm even remotely productive for anything and anyone again.
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Allow me to add, btw, that I'm not best pleased by the Win2k Recovery Console, nor am I best pleased with Win2k in general at this moment. Win2k didn't screw up here, I'm the one that screwed up, but let me point out a few things that made life more difficult:
1) Boot.ini, one of the most critical boot files on your 2k box is a text file. If you need to do anything with it from the Recovery Console, you can't, because the RC doesn't include a text editor of any sort that I could find. This is dumber than letting Diebold build voting machines.
2) Microsoft doesn't roll recent patches into the installers for various software. Adding a service patch for a piece of software spawned four more required patches for the patched version.
3) Given the number of patches that require reboots and the number of patches that explicitly check for if you've rebooted since the last reboot-requiring patch, I ended up spending the better part of a day getting Win2k and all applications patched back where they should have been.
4) Something I couldn't help but laugh at: it takes me less time to install FreeBSD 4.9 from scratch and get logged in on the console than it takes for a fully installed Win2k installation to boot to the desktop. I'd never noticed that before. I swear, if WINE handled Lightwave better, I'd not have even bothered to reinstall Win2k.
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