Create a System Restore Point
This wikiHow teaches you how to create a System Restore point on your Windows or Mac computer.
Steps
On Windows
- Open Start Template:Windows. Click the Windows logo in the bottom-left corner of the screen.
- Type in create a restore point. Doing so will search your computer for the System Restore menu.
- On Windows 7, you must first click the text box at the bottom of the Start menu.
- Click Template:MacButton. It's a computer-shaped icon at the top of the list of search results. Doing so opens the System Protection window.
- You may have to click the computer-shaped Control Panel icon in your computer's taskbar to show the System Protection window before proceeding.
- Click Template:MacButton. You'll find this on the lower-right side of the window. Clicking it prompts a pop-up window.
- Enter a name. Type a name for your System Restore point into the text box on the pop-up prompt.
- Windows will automatically add the time and date to the System Restore point's name.
- Click Template:MacButton. It's at the bottom of the prompt window. Doing so allows Windows to begin creating your System Restore point.
- Click Template:MacButton when prompted. This confirms that your System Restore point has been created.
- Click Template:MacButton. It's in the bottom-left corner of the window. Doing so saves your System Restore point.
On Mac
- Attach an external hard drive to your Mac. Plug one end of the hard drive's cable into your Mac, then plug the other end into the external hard drive if it isn't already connected.
- While Mac computers don't have System Restore points in the same way that Windows computers do, you can still create a restore point by using Time Machine.
- Your external hard drive must be at least as large as the amount of space that's taken up on your Mac's hard drive.
- Open Spotlight Template:Mac. Click the magnifying glass-shaped Spotlight icon in the top-right corner of the screen. A text box will appear in the middle of the screen.
- Search for Time Machine. Type time machine into the text box. Doing so will bring up a list of matching results below the text box.
- Double-click Template:MacButton. It's below the text box. The Time Machine menu will open.
- Click Template:MacButton. This is in the middle of the Time Machine menu. Doing so opens a pop-up window with different hard drives listed.
- Select your external hard drive. Click the name of the external hard drive you connected to your Mac.
- Click Template:MacButton. It's a blue button in the lower-right corner of the menu. Doing so will select the hard drive as your backup point.
- If the external hard drive has files on it or it hasn't been formatted for use with your Mac, you'll be prompted to erase it before proceeding. Click Erase to do so.
- Click the Time Machine menu icon. This circular arrow icon is near the far-right side of the menu bar that's at the top of your Mac's screen. A drop-down menu will appear.
- Click Template:MacButton. It's in the drop-down menu. Doing so prompts your Mac to begin backing up to your connected external hard drive.
Tips
- Creating a System Restore point is a virtually non-negotiable step to take before you make significant changes to your computer's system-level files (e.g., the Registry) or install potentially dangerous software.
Warnings
- If you make a change to your computer that renders the computer inoperable, you may not be able to use your System Restore point to return functionality to the computer.