Anyway, I did a search but my head is spinning as the world of disk back-up progs seems as confusing as the world of video encoders...
If you can help me cut through the crud and pick out a good one I would very grateful..
A good free one if you have a seagate or maxtor hard drive is the the new software they offer. It has a great ghost/image program that will do a full restore of a system from an image.lotus2035 wrote:...and dont say "Casper the Ghost" smartass..![]()
I had a good ghost program on a disc I got with some PC mag a while back but like an idiot I threw it out..(I always seem to need something right after I get rid of it!)..![]()
Anyway, I done a search but my head is spinning as the world of disk back-up progs seems as confusing as the world of video encoders...
If you can help me cut through the crud and pick out a good one I would very grateful..
Should be right click the drive in my computer. then properties.lotus2035 wrote:Guys thanks a lot for those links..![]()
Manytone, I'm not sure what make my harddrive is, I think its seagate but I suppose I'll have to pull open my PC to find out..
Or is there a way to do it in windows?...It's been a while since Ive played PC technician..
Thanks for the tip but no joy... Its listed as "Standard disk drives" and just has ST and some numbers after it....My harddrive is partitioned, I wonder if that alters the way the PC reads the details..manytone wrote:Should be right click the drive in my computer. then properties.lotus2035 wrote:Guys thanks a lot for those links..![]()
Manytone, I'm not sure what make my harddrive is, I think its seagate but I suppose I'll have to pull open my PC to find out..
Or is there a way to do it in windows?...It's been a while since Ive played PC technician..
go to hardware page and it should tell your drive model.
Paul
ST should be a Seagate Technologies drive. (so there is joy perhapslotus2035 wrote:Thanks for the tip but no joy... Its listed as "Standard disk drives" and just has ST and some numbers after it....My harddrive is partitioned, I wonder if that alters the way the PC reads the details..manytone wrote:Should be right click the drive in my computer. then properties.lotus2035 wrote:Guys thanks a lot for those links..![]()
Manytone, I'm not sure what make my harddrive is, I think its seagate but I suppose I'll have to pull open my PC to find out..
Or is there a way to do it in windows?...It's been a while since Ive played PC technician..
go to hardware page and it should tell your drive model.
Paul
anyway, not to worry, I'll sort it out tomorrow...
Really?..excellent!, I suppose I should have guessed.. I will give it a whirl!..manytone wrote:ST should be a Seagate Technologies drive. (so there is joy perhaps)
Download the seagate version of the software. I bet it will work
I was planning on creating an image on my "data" partition and/or backing up to DVDs...manytone wrote:BTW
What are you going to be imaging on to?
You will surely want to do this to a second drive and not on the 1 hard drive you have. The reason for this is if that original hard drive fails, which is when you will need the image, you won't be able to get to it on the failed drive. So surely get a second drive for images. Preferably USB, then you can shut the drive off and disconnect it for safety from Virus and longevity in the drives lifespan.
Paul
Well, I have had over 5 hard drive failures myself and just last week helped my best bud through one. (He now uses the seagate image on an external drive.)lotus2035 wrote:I was planning on creating an image on my "data" partition and/or backing up to DVDs...manytone wrote:BTW
What are you going to be imaging on to?
You will surely want to do this to a second drive and not on the 1 hard drive you have. The reason for this is if that original hard drive fails, which is when you will need the image, you won't be able to get to it on the failed drive. So surely get a second drive for images. Preferably USB, then you can shut the drive off and disconnect it for safety from Virus and longevity in the drives lifespan.
Paul
I've just done a clean install of my OS with my major music apps intstalled and wanted to back that up...
I havent had a harddrive fail on me yet so it never crossed my mind...
hmm, I regularly format, reinstall and defragment, I wonder if that would have any effect on harddrive lifespan?..I've had my present hardrive about 3 years now and my PC was used when I bought it!...maybe I should give it some more thought before its too late..manytone wrote:Well, I have had over 5 hard drive failures myself and just last week helped my best bud through one. (He now uses the seagate image on an external drive.)lotus2035 wrote:I was planning on creating an image on my "data" partition and/or backing up to DVDs...manytone wrote:BTW
What are you going to be imaging on to?
You will surely want to do this to a second drive and not on the 1 hard drive you have. The reason for this is if that original hard drive fails, which is when you will need the image, you won't be able to get to it on the failed drive. So surely get a second drive for images. Preferably USB, then you can shut the drive off and disconnect it for safety from Virus and longevity in the drives lifespan.
Paul
I've just done a clean install of my OS with my major music apps intstalled and wanted to back that up...
I havent had a harddrive fail on me yet so it never crossed my mind...
Four of my 5 hard drive failures allowed me to still access the data when I hooked it up to a new system as a second drive. One of my failures was severe though and showed nothing at all. There are ways to ""sometimes"" get this data but you are getting in deep at that point. Especially if you were trying to recover an image. Hopefully one never has to go that route Wink
My friend above, who had the failure last week also had a severe failure. The drive was cooked hard. There is no way you will easily be able to recover an image from a severely failed drive.
Hence the 2nd drive is needed. I would not be safe any other way nor would I ever trust an image that is on the same drive as original data.
Paul
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