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Rad Community Technical Discussion Boards (Computer Hardware + PC Software) >> Norton Ghost 2003,  Ghost v8.x + Ghost Solution Suite (GSS) Discussion Board >> Norton/Ghost 2003 help - 2 questions
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Message started by Nick25 on Jun 3rd, 2005 at 3:24pm

Title: Norton/Ghost 2003 help - 2 questions
Post by Nick25 on Jun 3rd, 2005 at 3:24pm
OK, after doing some research I came to the conclution that Norton /Ghost 2003 DOS version is what I want and I've just installed the software. Being new to this software can any guru here plase help me with the following two questions and thanks in advance for your help.

1)I created the floppy DOS BootDisk and tested it and it's working fine and since I'm going to use the DOS only version, does that mean I can now uninstall Norton/Ghost 2003 and simply use the BootDisk to create/restore image?

2)You know how unreliable diskette is, so instead of booting from diskette I want to create an iso and burn it to CD and use the DOS version on the CD, is this possible?

Thanks again for your help.


Title: Re: Norton/Ghost 2003 help - 2 questions
Post by Dick26 on Jun 3rd, 2005 at 4:02pm
1. Yes, but make a few extra Ghost boot floppies first, because if the one you have goes bad, then you'll have back ups.

You might want to leave Ghost installed for a while, until you are sure everything is working okay for you first.

2. Yes. Actually Ghost will make a bootable CD for you. Write one small image to CD and it will ask if you want to make the CD bootable.

I'm not sure if you ned the Windows interface for this. Perhaps someone else can clarify. I am lazy and use the Windows interface.

Title: Re: Norton/Ghost 2003 help - 2 questions
Post by NightOwl on Jun 3rd, 2005 at 5:05pm
Nick25

2.  If all you want is a bootable CD that boots as if it were that floppy disk, if you have a burning program such as Roxio Creator Classic, you just start a new project, select bootable disc, Floppy 1.44 MB emulation, use floppy disk--the program will ask for the floppy, read it and place the necessary boot sector info on the CD.  Burn it and you have a CD that acts like that floppy.

Title: Re: Norton/Ghost 2003 help - 2 questions
Post by Nick 25 on Jun 3rd, 2005 at 5:25pm
Thanks Dick26 and NightOwl for your help.

Ok, I think I got the picture.

Regarding the creation of ISO CD (floppy bootdisk), I'm using Nero and there are few options:

Kind of Emulation: Floppy Emulation 1.44MB
Boot Message: Nero Boot Loader V6.0
Load segment of sectors (hex!): 07C0
Number of loaded sectors: 1

Do I need to change any of the above (all are defaults)

Thanks again for your help.






Title: Re: Norton/Ghost 2003 help - 2 questions
Post by NightOwl on Jun 3rd, 2005 at 6:05pm
Nick 25

Should work with the defaults.  Use a re-writeable first to make sure so you do not waste disks.

Report back with your results!

Title: Re: Norton/Ghost 2003 help - 2 questions
Post by Nick25 on Jun 3rd, 2005 at 10:36pm
;D woo woo it works! (1.44MB floopy to CD ISO)

My C drive=15GB, however XP and other softwares only used up 3.8GB and hence about 12GB free.

Booting from CD, I selected "Fast" to create an image of my C drive and now the ***.GHO file which I saved to my D partition is only 1.7GB? is this about right?

Thanks again for your help NightOwl   ;)


Title: Re: Norton/Ghost 2003 help - 2 questions
Post by NightOwl on Jun 3rd, 2005 at 10:42pm
Nick25

Congrats on your success  ;) !


Quote:
selected "Fast" to create an image of my C drive and now the ***.GHO file which I saved to my D partition is only 1.7GB? is this about right?


That sounds about right--did you do an 'Integrity Check' of the image--that's the important final step to have confidence that all is working correctly!

Title: Re: Norton/Ghost 2003 help - 2 questions
Post by Nick25 on Jun 3rd, 2005 at 10:53pm
Yes, using the same CD under Options, I did check and it passed  ;D

Thanks to you my Norton/Ghost 2003 Guru ;), p/s is "No compression" better than "Fast" or should I ask which compression will cause the least problems?

Regards.

Title: Re: Norton/Ghost 2003 help - 2 questions
Post by NightOwl on Jun 3rd, 2005 at 11:15pm
Nick25


Quote:
p/s is "No compression" better than "Fast" or should I ask which compression will cause the least problems?


Personal preference for the most part--I always use 'Fast' myself--in some tests I did a while back--'Fast' compression created an image faster than 'No compression'--but, usually the more compression, the slower the creation process.

Title: Re: Norton/Ghost 2003 help - 2 questions
Post by Nick25 on Jun 3rd, 2005 at 11:39pm
Thanks so much for your help NightOwl, no more questions  from me ;)

Have a great evening!

Regards.

Those who bring sunshine into the lives of others cannot keep it from themselves.




Title: Re: Norton/Ghost 2003 help - 2 questions
Post by NightOwl on Jun 4th, 2005 at 2:04am
Nick25

;)

And...you just brought sunshine into mine!

Title: Re: Norton/Ghost 2003 help - 2 questions
Post by Dan Goodell on Jun 5th, 2005 at 1:44am
"in some tests I did a while back--'Fast' compression created an image faster than 'No compression'--but, usually the more compression, the slower the creation process."

It's probably similar to the pro-vs-con of 'drivespace' back in the DOS 5.x-6.x days.  (For you kids who weren't around then, drivespace was a gimmick to compress an entire partition on-the-fly so you could fit more data on a physical disk.)

Compression takes cpu processing time, but the result is a smaller file.  So, the question is/was: which takes longer, the extra cpu time or the extra disk-write time?  The tradeoff switches at some point, and it depends on how fast your processor/memory is vs. how fast your hard disk is.


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