Title: Re: Can I recover ghost 10 files to another system
Post by Brian on Jul 21st, 2007 at 12:08am
Ran, Sure. Have the recovery point in the new computer. Boot to the CD. Quote:Recovering files and folders from the recovery environment You can start your computer using the Symantec Recovery Disk and restore files and folders from within a recovery point. When you are running the recovery environment, there are several support utilities available that you can run to troubleshoot networking or hardware issues you may encounter. For example, you can ping a computer, renew IP addresses, or get information about a hard disk partition table. To restore files and folders using the recovery environment 1 Start the computer using the recovery environment. See “Starting your computer using the recovery environment” on page 94. 2 Click Recover My Files. 3 If the Symantec Recovery Disk cannot locate any recovery points, you are prompted to locate one. 2 Click OK > Open another location. 2 Browse to an alternate folder where current recovery points are stored. 2 Click OK, select a recovery point from the resulting list, and click Browse Contents. w If you are attempting to restore files or folders from a network location and you are having trouble, make sure you type the name of the computer and share that holds your recovery points, in the File name text box. For example, \\computer_name\share_name.you might have to modify some settings. If you are still having problems, see “Using the networking tools in the recovery environment” on page 106. 4 In the tree view panel of the Recovery Point Browser, double-click the drive containing the files or folders you want to restore to expand it. 5 In the content panel of the Recovery Point Browser, do the following to select the files or folders you want to restore. 6 Click Recover Files. Where possible, the Recover Items dialog box will automatically fill in the Restore to this folder text box with the original path where the files originated. If the original location does not include a drive letter (because the drive was hidden when you created the recovery point), you must enter a drive letter for the drive before you can restore any files or folders. 7 If the original path is unknown, or you want to restore the selected files to a different location, click Browse to locate the destination. 8 Click Recover to restore the files. |
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