When your Windows PC refuses to boot—whether due to a corrupted registry, malware, lost partitions, or a failed hard drive—a bootable rescue environment becomes your best friend. Active@ Boot Disk 24.1.1 (64-bit) is one of the most capable commercial solutions on the market. But what exactly does it offer, and why should you steer clear of "pre-activated" cracked versions?
Change Boot Order: Restart your computer, enter the BIOS/UEFI settings (by pressing keys like F2, F12, Del, or Esc, depending on your system), and change the boot order to prioritize the device you plan to use (USB drive or DVD).
Save and Exit: Save your changes and exit the BIOS/UEFI settings. Your computer will restart. Active- Boot Disk 24.1.1 -x64- Pre-Activated Wi...
Boot from Device: The computer should now boot from the Active-Boot Disk. You might see a menu or a command-line interface, depending on the software.
Here’s a useful guide for its main features: Active@ Boot Disk 24
If a partition disappears after a failed resize operation or virus attack, the Partition Recovery tool analyzes the disk’s boot sectors and file tables. It rebuilds the partition table non-destructively, restoring drive letters and folder structures in minutes.
| Tool | Purpose | Steps | |------|---------|-------| | Disk Image | Backup entire disks/partitions | Select source drive → choose destination (external HDD) → start imaging | | Partition Recovery | Restore deleted/lost partitions | Scan disk → preview found partitions → select to recover | | Data Recovery (Undelete) | Recover deleted files | Choose drive → scan → filter by file type → recover to another drive | | Password Changer | Reset Windows local admin password | Select SAM hive → pick user → set new password (offline) | | Disk Wipe | Secure erase data | Select drive → choose wipe method (DoD, Gutmann) → execute | Change Boot Order : Restart your computer, enter
Create a byte-for-byte image of a failing drive to a healthy one. The Image Backup feature supports compressed images (saving up to 40% space) and split images for archiving on FAT32 drives. Unlike dd on Linux, this provides a GUI progress bar and verification checksums.
You'll find sites offering "Active@ Boot Disk 24.1.1 x64 Pre-Activated" for free. Here's why using such versions is a bad idea: