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Solve : Can't get Norton Ghost to transfer my op system to new computer? |
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Answer» I acquired a new computer and hoped to move the operating system from my old computer over to it painlessly by creating an image of the old system's hard disk drive and copying it to the new system's hard disk drive using Norton Ghost. TThis one keeps coming up. You cannot copy a Windows installation from one computer to a different one. It won't work. Whether you take the disk out of one PC and put it in another, or whether you use Ghost, it won't work. You need to install Windows afresh on your new computer. That's it. "Saviour applauds..." I couldn't have said it any better.I was wondering that, myself... So when you hear people TALKING about "ghosting" a drive, they're probably using the utility (or similar software) to image files and / or data -- not operating systems. To the original poster: I've used Ghost as a backup, and actually restored the operating system and all files to a drive, but it was the same drive in the same computer. (I was trying to avoid the hassle of having to reload Windows 2000.) In that case, Ghost restored everything with no problems. Quote from: Aegis on June 02, 2008, 11:17:27 AM So when you hear people talking about "ghosting" a drive, they're probably using the utility (or similar software) to image files and / or data -- not operating systems. You can "Ghost" a drive, with or without an OS on it, in various ways - you can clone one drive onto another, for example when you buy a bigger drive to replace the old one that your OS is on. Often drive manufacturers will give away a cut down version of Symantec (formerly Norton) Ghost for this purpose, and include the CD in the drive packaging. Another thing you can do is to make a disk image file of a disk or partition on another drive or on a DVD-ROM or RW or a series of them. That way, if anything happens to your OS you can restore it, either to the original disk or to a new one. Quote I've used Ghost as a backup, and actually restored the operating system and all files to a drive Quote but it was the same drive in the same computer. Exactly. It needn't be the same drive, it can be a newer faster bigger one, as I mentioned above, but it has to be in the same computer. Quote I was trying to avoid the hassle of having to reload Windows 2000.) In that case, Ghost restored everything with no problems. That is what it is very useful for. Another thing that Ghost is used for: say you run a company and have a few, or dozens or hundreds of identical computers, you can set one up just right, with a corporate (no activation) version of Windows, make a Ghost image of the OS disk, burn it to DVD-ROMs, and deploy it to as many PCs as you have Windows licences for. Thank you for your help, gents. I will now bite the bullet and do it the long way. Quote Another thing that Ghost is used for: say you run a company and have a few, or dozens or hundreds of identical computers, you can set one up just right, with a corporate (no activation) version of Windows, make a Ghost image of the OS disk, burn it to DVD-ROMs, and deploy it to as many PCs as you have Windows licences for. I'm certain those were the kinds of conversations I used to overhear when people spoke of "ghosting."I have a similar situation where I have two hard drives, because one is going to be replaced and is acting up, occasionally. I have Ghost installed on my old drive and use the new drive for backup. LOTS of GB on both drives. I should be able to properly install windows xp onto the new drive, recover my backed up system and files from my new drive, and (send it to my new drive, or after I have sent it to my old drive first, and then back to my new drive, confused yet?) I would then reconfigure the Bios boot sequence and run from the new drive and use the old drive as a back up. Does this make any sense? I really just want to use my new installed drive for the operating system and not lose anything. Thanks. I'm not completely sure about that -- but mostly because I haven't used Ghost for partial backups. Now, you should be able to ghost everything from one drive to another if you're going to use the drives in the same computer. In fact, that may be easiest. I'm not "saying" don't try it your way, but if you have operating systems on both drives, and you ghost a bunch of applications and data back to one of them, I'm thinking that the operating system won't "know" all the applications are there, because by not being installed, the apps won't have the proper directory links and so forth built.A while ago when my hard drive crashed, I had to reinstall windows. Just plain old windows with no applications whatsoever. Thankfully I had Ghost backed up on the other drive. So when I recovered, voila, less than 10 minutes later I was up and running to the last RECOVERY point. So, now in theory, what I want to try should work. I will let all know if it does. Thanks. Excellent! Let us know how it works out, please. |
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