Software Updates and Recovery and System Software
Hardware and Software Guide 8–9
Software Recovery
Using System Restore
System Restore is an operating system feature that enables you
to undo harmful changes to your computer software by restoring
your software to an earlier time, called a restore point, when your
software was functioning optimally.
Restore points are restorable, benchmark “snapshots” of your
application, driver, and operating system files. The computer sets
restore points at regular intervals and may set additional restore
points whenever you change your personal settings or add
software or hardware.
Manually setting additional restore points provides additional
protection for your system files and settings. It is recommended
that you manually set restore points
■ Before you add or extensively modify software or hardware.
■ Periodically, whenever the system is performing optimally.
Restoring to any restore point does not affect your files. For
example, restoring your system software to an earlier time will
not affect documents or e-mails that you saved after that time.
All System Restore procedures are reversible.