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Hoster Help Post Hoster questions, tips and suggestions here. |
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#21
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No problem...all is cool here.
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#22
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No problem here either. Sometimes George and I just have different methods.
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Dale Douglass 2nd Generation Karaoke I am not a member of the MTU Staff.
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#23
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nice to hear that, but anyway, since reading all this, now i am comfused, whats the diff. between cloning and creating an image i thought cloning is making and ecxact copy of my hd, and creating an image is making a duplicate copy? ![]() |
#24
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You're right, cloning is making an exact working copy of your main hd.
Let's say you have cloned your c: to d: C: takes a dump. You're in the middle of a show. You can switch to D: immediately, and continue on. Later you can clone d: to c: to do a restoration. You must use two drived with cloning...a USB drive for laptops, either type for desktops. Same scenario with an image file: Forget switching drives immediatly and carrying on. You must use a bootable disc to open the image file to restore the system. Imaging create a file with your hard drive info compressed in that file. This image file is not fully operational, and if needed for restoration, must be activated with a bootable disc which you create prior to creating the image file. The image file can reside on either another drive, or the same drive..Personally I think it's playing Russian Roulette to have it reside on the same drive. If the drive fails mechanically, you're up a creek. Once again it's a matter of choices. I prefer the complete security offered by cloning that imaging just cannot compete with.....IMHO Only disadvantage I see to cloning is, in that it is an exact copy, it requires the same amount of room as the primary data. No problem if you use two identical size drives, or a larger drive for the backup. Imaging obviously was the way to go a few years back, when drives were expensive, and USB wasn't around... but now??? From what I've read on the forums, either Acronis or Norton Ghost will do either process. I hope I haven't skewed any facts in either direction. Last edited by George; December 21st, 2007 at 03:39 PM. |
#25
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![]() Introducing Acronis True Image 8.0: True Disaster Recovery Recently voted best disk imaging solution by our Readers, some of the features provided by Acronis True Image v8.0 include:
Installation went relatively smooth, except for the fact that True Image gave me an error message when I tried to create a bootable CD Rescue Disc. I later found out it was because my particular brand of DVD burner [Sony DW-D56A] uses a "non-standard driver," which conflicts with the CD creation process. But not to worry -- ![]() With my Rescue Media now burned to a CD-Rewriteable, I decided to test the boot disc by rebooting my computer. Sure enough, the disc started and the Rescue Media screen appeared. Satisfied that the bootable Rescue Media was working as it should, I rebooted my system once more and created my first image backup. There were 8 steps in creating my image:
![]() Acronis True Image 8.0 recognizes all hard disks connected to the PC, along with a wide variety of removable media drives with P-ATA (IDE), S-ATA, SCSI, USB, IEEE1394 (Firewire) and PCMCIA interfaces including: CD-ROM / DVD-ROM and CD-R/W recorders and burners, magneto-optical drives, Zip and Jazz devices, and many others. True Image 8.0 works with Windows XP, Windows Me, Windows 2000 Professional, Windows NT 4.0 Workstation Service Pack 6, Windows 98, and supports FAT16/32, NTFS, Linux Ext2, Ext3, ReiserFS, and Linux SWAP file systems. Conclusion If we lived in a perfect world: Windows would never crash, Spyware wouldn't be nearly impossible to remove, and there wouldn't be any need to worry if a recent download has caused irreversible damage to the integrity of our systems. With a 5-star rating from the editor's at download.com, and an overwhelming percentage of Gazette Readers in favor of the program, Acronis True Image offers premium PC protection that absolutely no computer user should be without. Acronis TrueImage: 8.0 Download
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Windows 7 Pro 32BIT AMD Phenom II X2 545 3.0GHz (Dual Core) 45nm, AM3 6MB Cache 4GB (2x2GB) PC8500 DDR2 1066 Dual Channel 1TB Raid1 Internal Hard Drives C:\ System files C:\ Hoster kma files ATI Radeon HD 4350 512MB PCI Express 16x dual head Sound Blaster Audigy SE 7.1 CD Drive Plextor DR Premium DVD Drive Plextor PX-712A |
#26
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George this will not work for a laptop.
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That is what I was trying to say before. The only way I can see him doing this is to setup a second cloned laptop drive before the problem occurs and keep it with his equipment. That way he could stop and swap out the drives. This would require creating a clone on an external, then clone that to the second laptop drive every time you make any changes.
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Dale Douglass 2nd Generation Karaoke I am not a member of the MTU Staff.
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#27
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![]() I just learned something new, so all this wasn't a total waste. Was considering a laptop for using Hoster for our private Karaoke club. That's out for sure. Thanks. Last edited by George; December 21st, 2007 at 06:11 PM. |
#28
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George I don't know that I would rule out a laptop, as long as you have your desktop for backup. A lot of these guys use two laptops which would work too.
The real question is how many times have you had a hard drive fail completely in the middle of a show? Sometimes we can get over paranoid about it.
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Dale Douglass 2nd Generation Karaoke I am not a member of the MTU Staff.
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#29
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I hear what you're saying, but I don't want to be that one out of the thousand, or whatever the number is.
Not worth the convenience a laptop affords, in my situation. I host for a private Karaoke Club that my wife and I belong to. Take care, |
#30
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Not to beat a dead horse but...
it seems from what I have read that if the BIOS of a system (desktop or notebook) supports booting from a USB device you could use Acronis to "clone" your c:\ drive to a USB drive and then in an emergency change the Boot sequence in the BIOS to boot from the USB device. Older systems did not have this capability but newer ones do.
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Windows 7 Pro 32BIT AMD Phenom II X2 545 3.0GHz (Dual Core) 45nm, AM3 6MB Cache 4GB (2x2GB) PC8500 DDR2 1066 Dual Channel 1TB Raid1 Internal Hard Drives C:\ System files C:\ Hoster kma files ATI Radeon HD 4350 512MB PCI Express 16x dual head Sound Blaster Audigy SE 7.1 CD Drive Plextor DR Premium DVD Drive Plextor PX-712A |
#31
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I had a hard drive take a dump due to bad bearings, which went a long way to develop my attitude against imaging on the same drive. Thanks again for the heads up...I'll look into it if and when I decide to go laptop. Might even find a full blown hard drive with that capability. Things change. |
#32
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#33
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can't clone hhd
i downloaded the trial version of acronis mirror image 11 ( 15 day full function trial ) and it wont let me clone destinaton drive
" has to be empty ".. |
#34
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Norton Ghost will overwrite.
Kinda surprised that Acronis wants an empty drive just to create a image file, even for cloning, for that matter. Cloning does replace anything on the target drive, so one has to be careful, but imaging replaces nothing, simply creates a compressed image of the source drive. |
#35
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george, I'm still confused about image and clone differences. Why one and not the other? Why have a choice of both, what difference does it make?
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#36
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#37
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#38
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It all depends on what you want.The cloning results in a fully operational drive without having to use a boot disc to restore the data on it to a working state.
Obviously since it seems Acronis needs a wiped drive to clone to, Norton Ghost would be the way to go if one elects to use cloning, as it will overwrite the target drive. If one elects imaging, I guess it wouldn't matter, but I'm hard pressed to see why anyone would use imaging if they are going to use two hard drives. I believe we've beat this horse to death, and it's getting very redundant, making the same points over and over. It's all explained here: http://www.ctpc.org/nltr1007/ae1007.htm Last edited by George; December 26th, 2007 at 04:01 PM. |
#39
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#40
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http://www.pcstats.com/articleview.cfm?articleID=1676 Bear in mind I'm making no suggestions that these guys mess with the bios, but it appears a tech could do it easily, motherboard permitting. Now I'm back to thinking of a laptop and Hoster for our private Karaoke club meetings. May be some light at the end of the tunnel after all. ![]() Last edited by George; January 10th, 2008 at 11:39 AM. |
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