You won't necessarily get any satisfaction from a new hard drive unless you are sure the old one is knackered (or about to go). Your problems could just be software related so a reload of Windows could help.
I tend to find using Scandisk (set to repair bad sectors) and Defrag to tidy things up, helps a bit. Together with Windows XP firewall, good anti virus and a good spyware checker.
In my opinion you are most likely to kill your hard drive by installing dodgy virus infested software or downloads. Or your hard drive will die of its own accord (physical failure).
The latter nothing can be done about unless you pay lots to get a thrid party company to open the drive and recover your data.
And i'm afraid a new hard drive could be just like your old one. By that I mean you should assume your hard drive could fail at the next boot up. Therefore do all your critical backups each time you shut down.
Just my humble opinion.
I tend to find using Scandisk (set to repair bad sectors) and Defrag to tidy things up, helps a bit. Together with Windows XP firewall, good anti virus and a good spyware checker.
In my opinion you are most likely to kill your hard drive by installing dodgy virus infested software or downloads. Or your hard drive will die of its own accord (physical failure).
The latter nothing can be done about unless you pay lots to get a thrid party company to open the drive and recover your data.
And i'm afraid a new hard drive could be just like your old one. By that I mean you should assume your hard drive could fail at the next boot up. Therefore do all your critical backups each time you shut down.
Just my humble opinion.
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