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Scott Seidman August 31st, 2004 02:18 PM

Easy Geek question
 
"Sarge" wrote in
:


Although I don't use it you may want to look at stuff from Norton called
Disk Ghost.



Ghost is mostly for distribution of numerous identical PC's, not for
backing up one.

Scott

GaryM August 31st, 2004 03:00 PM

Easy Geek question
 
Scott Seidman wrote in
. 1.4:

Ghost is mostly for distribution of numerous identical PC's, not for
backing up one.


That is Ghost Corportate Edition. Ghost Personal is for backup.

http://www.symantec.com/sabu/ghost/g.../features.html
http://sea.symantec.com/content/product.cfm?productid=9


Scott Seidman August 31st, 2004 07:02 PM

Easy Geek question
 
GaryM wrote in
. 3.44:

Scott Seidman wrote in
. 1.4:

Ghost is mostly for distribution of numerous identical PC's, not for
backing up one.


That is Ghost Corportate Edition. Ghost Personal is for backup.

http://www.symantec.com/sabu/ghost/g.../features.html
http://sea.symantec.com/content/product.cfm?productid=9



Thanks for clearing that up. I haven't used the product since way before
symantec started marketing it to the masses-- possibly before symantec even
owned the product.

FWIW, I've been very happy with Dantz Retrospect. At $129, it works really
well

Scott

GregP August 31st, 2004 07:28 PM

Easy Geek question
 
On 31 Aug 2004 18:02:01 GMT, Scott Seidman
wrote:


FWIW, I've been very happy with Dantz Retrospect. At $129, it works really
well



Do you also run a real-time virus checker ? I find that just
having that going slows me down quite a bit and a real-time
disk/file synchronizer has to have an impact as well. Mebbe
it's time to upgrade my 10-mo. old laptop :-)

Scott Seidman August 31st, 2004 07:34 PM

Easy Geek question
 
GregP wrote in
:

On 31 Aug 2004 18:02:01 GMT, Scott Seidman
wrote:


FWIW, I've been very happy with Dantz Retrospect. At $129, it works
really well



Do you also run a real-time virus checker ? I find that just
having that going slows me down quite a bit and a real-time
disk/file synchronizer has to have an impact as well. Mebbe
it's time to upgrade my 10-mo. old laptop :-)


I do run Trend Officescan

I won't run a real-time synchronizer. Once a night is plenty for me. Even
with Retrospect, I won't back up the system or applications, just the data.
I figure if my system crashes, I'm better off doing a clean reinstall of
the system and apps.

Scott

GregP August 31st, 2004 07:44 PM

Easy Geek question
 
On 31 Aug 2004 18:34:38 GMT, Scott Seidman
wrote:

I figure if my system crashes, I'm better off doing a clean reinstall of
the system and apps.



... mainly because you'll eventually end up doing it anyway,
even if the disk doesn't crash...

Scott Seidman August 31st, 2004 08:29 PM

Easy Geek question
 
GregP wrote in
:

On 31 Aug 2004 18:34:38 GMT, Scott Seidman
wrote:

I figure if my system crashes, I'm better off doing a clean reinstall of
the system and apps.



... mainly because you'll eventually end up doing it anyway,
even if the disk doesn't crash...


Actually, computational life has been pretty stable. I do keep a
convenient list of everything I install though, just in case

Scott

Stan Gula August 31st, 2004 09:26 PM

Easy Geek question
 
Scott Seidman wrote:
Actually, computational life has been pretty stable. I do keep a
convenient list of everything I install though, just in case

Scott


Not replying to you specifically, Scott, but nobody has mentioned my current
favorite tool: BootIT-NG. Very inexpensive, excellent partition tool and
imager.
http://www.terabyteunlimited.com/

Imaging is the *only* way to go. I image to a spare drive nightly (two
systems) and burn an archival copy to DVD weekly. I also have an FTP robot
run nightly that moves all files touched since the last DVD image up to my
web server. Let's just say I've been burned by backup systems many times
over the past 35 years. About once a month (or so) I do a restore from one
of the DVD images to make sure the system is still working. It pays to have
piles of slightly outmoded systems around.
--
Stan Gula
http://gula.org/roffswaps



Stan Gula September 1st, 2004 12:49 PM

Easy Geek question
 
riverman wrote:
Wanna put that in English, Stan?


My message was for the hardcore geeks, not you, but I'll explain a bit.

partition: a logical disk. This can be an entire physical disk, a slice of
a physical disk, or even spread over mutiple physical disks, Actually
there's a difference between a partition and a logical disk, but for this
conversation, logical disk is good enough. When you reference 'C:' in
Windows, you're referencing a partition on a physisal disk.

image: in this context I'm talking about, a compressed copy of a partition.
You can also take an image of a physical disk. The software I use creates
the image in multiple files of 4.5GB so I can burn them to DVD.

You can take an image of a partition, and restore it completely. For
example, if you had just a C: drive, you could restore your system in
minutes from an image.

The thing you're asking for, real time backup of touched files, I have no
experience with. I like to control stuff manually.

I'll assume you're running XP. There's a tool called robocopy in the XP
resource kit (along with lots of useful and potentially dangerous stuff)
that can do something like what you're trying to do, only manually. Here's
a link to the download page:
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/d...displaylang=en

--
Stan Gula
http://gula.org/roffswaps




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