rulirahm wrote on Jun 2nd, 2007 at 8:30am:"... And I don't touch anything but still error..."
Quote:"... Paratroopers and parachutists carry two parachutes. The primary parachute is called a main parachute, the secondary is called a reserve parachute. The jumper uses the reserve if the main parachute fails to deploy or operate correctly..."
Wikipedia
For those encountering difficulty with the lineal descendants of PowerQuest Drive Image 7.
n there is an alternative
measure to consider when deliberating on implementing a
main/reserve approach to ensuring the security of system contents, albeit only
Pleonasm has reported actual experience in doing so. View the image below to realize that there are indeed
"two-sides-of-the-street-to-walk-on". Actually, with either Norton Ghost 10.0, Norton Save
& Restore, or the Symantec Recovery Disk included with Norton SystemWorks 2006 Premier one can boot up with
the factory installation CD
alone to either
"walk-on-the-dark-side (hot-imaging)" or "walk-on-the-bright-side
(cold-imaging)". However, to enjoy the greatest confidence with the latter one would be wise to adopt the
"(whole)disk-to-image" legacy Norton Ghost Backup procedure with its concomitant
"image-to-disk" legacy Ghost Restore whenever
"cold-imaging". Not to be overlooked is the ability to extract individual files and folders from the global
"cold-image" without the necessity of restoring the entire image. Plausibly, the only
caveat I can imagine is incompatibility with the Vista OS series.
To enjoy such flexibility, one can start off by simply using the relevant installation CD in booting up into what is called the Windows XP Preinstallation Environment to immediately engage the legacy Backup/Restore
"cold-imaging" procedures by following the path
'Recover > Recover Data on My Computer > Recover using a legacy Ghost image'
and create a
"disk-to-image" legacy Norton Ghost Backup image to reside anywhere else other than on the MASTER HDD. Doing this yields the side benefit of bypassing both USB mass-storage device and - most, if not all - SATA HDD glitches frequently encountered with DOS-dependent Norton Ghost 2003. In essence, this procedure uses
restoreghost.exe
(an alternate name for
ghost32.exe
) to allow both immediate creation of Ghost Backup images or the converse Restore (recovery) of such images that are in fact
totally compatible and interchangeable with those *.gho/*.ghs files created with the ghost.exe
of Norton Ghost 2003 -
but not with those files created with Norton Ghost 9, 10.0, 12, S&R software during "hot-imaging" sesssions.
One could probably use Norton Ghost 2003 on bootable removable media to essentially do the same thing, but I have found Norton Ghost Ver 8.2 running in WIN PE to be more robust under deteriorating conditions. One would be well advised to perform an Integrity Check on the legacy Ghost Backup image which now constitutes the
reserve image to be updated periodically while the
"hot-imaging" products can be used to produce the
main image for routine operations on a daily basis.
As an aside, if one you really wanted to get downright fancy, he could even go so far as to incorporate the essential components of the
"cold-imaging" Norton Ghost Ver 8.2 while generating a bootable BartPE or Reatogo-X-PE CD to run in the Windows XP Preinstalled Environment (see below). In the event of a HDD failure or catastrophic viral attack, this is indeed a handy item to have to start down the road to recovery.
EP