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how to back up windows, not the whole drive?
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| How could I backup Windows XP so that I could restore it to the exact
settings I have in place without having to backup the entire drive?
Thanks
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| It all depends what you mean by "exact settings".
"Doc" <docsavage20@REMOVEhotmail.com> wrote in message
news:Eyumd.1138$Qh3.525@newsread3.news.atl.earthlink.net...
> How could I backup Windows XP so that I could restore it to the exact
> settings I have in place without having to backup the entire drive?
>
> Thanks
>
>
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> It all depends what you mean by "exact settings".
In other words, Windows crashes. Instead of using the install disc, just
wipe the drive and recopy the backup of windows back to the drive.
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| "Doc" <docsavage20@REMOVEhotmail.com> wrote in news:T7xmd.1320
$Qh3.749@newsread3.news.atl.earthlink.net:
> just
> wipe the drive and recopy the backup of windows back to the drive.
>
Sounds feasible. Shame about the user settings, user data and
applications that would be lost though.
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| > In other words, Windows crashes. Instead of using the install disc, just
> wipe the drive and recopy the backup of windows back to the drive.
Think differently. Install Windows on empty hard drive, perform basic
configuration. Take a disk image and store it on medium from which you could
easily restore it. Test restore. Done.
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"Peter" <peterfoxghost@yahoo.ca> wrote in message
news:2vvrlfF2q6uamU1@uni-berlin.de...
>
> Think differently. Install Windows on empty hard drive, perform basic
> configuration. Take a disk image and store it on medium from which you
could
> easily restore it. Test restore. Done.
What's the difference between a disc image and backing up the harddrive?
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| > What's the difference between a disc image and backing up the harddrive?
What difference aspect are you interested in?
Backup is a broad term to duplicate selected portions of your file system to
another storage media.
Disk image reduces selection criteria to a disk as a whole. It preserves
file system properties.
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| Andy Lee 2004-11-17, 7:45 am |
| On Tue, 16 Nov 2004 21:46:12 GMT, "Doc"
<docsavage20@REMOVEhotmail.com> wrote:
>How could I backup Windows XP so that I could restore it to the exact
>settings I have in place without having to backup the entire drive?
>
>Thanks
>
Use ghost to create an image of the partition instead of the whole
drive if XP goes dead the just use ghost to restore the partion
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| J. Clarke 2004-11-17, 8:45 pm |
| Peter wrote:
>
> What difference aspect are you interested in?
> Backup is a broad term to duplicate selected portions of your file system
> to another storage media.
> Disk image reduces selection criteria to a disk as a whole. It preserves
> file system properties.
Actually, the latest and greatest enterprise solution from Symantec (which
is what I suspect they were _really_ after when then bought out PowerQuest)
can do incremental images, just imaging the parts that were changed since
the previous image.
--
--John
Reply to jclarke at ae tee tee global dot net
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
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| Start out with System Preparation (Sysprep) tool included in Windows XP.
"Doc" <docsavage20@REMOVEhotmail.com> wrote in message
news:Eyumd.1138$Qh3.525@newsread3.news.atl.earthlink.net...
> How could I backup Windows XP so that I could restore it to the exact
> settings I have in place without having to backup the entire drive?
>
> Thanks
>
>
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| Con Shea 2004-11-30, 7:45 am |
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Find a spare partition on the existing drive or a second drive, install
XP on it. Then boot to the new XP. Run the built-in backup program to
back up your old XP files to a .bkf file. Restore later to the exact
same settings.
This is completely free. No need to spend money on imaging software.
..cs
Doc wrote:
> How could I backup Windows XP so that I could restore it to the exact
> settings I have in place without having to backup the entire drive?
>
> Thanks
>
>
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