Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware (
More info?)
As Thomas Wendell suggested, run ntfsdos to make your NTFS
partitions visible. This should enable you to locate your Ghost
image files.
Personally I do not think that image files should be stored on
the PC's working disk. It defies the purpose of creating images.
I store all my images on removeable disks. This is much, much
safer.
"User" <User@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:1E451A61-5396-4A8C-BAC1-D0DC4D9A05B2@microsoft.com...
> Well, I meant command prompt. I said DOS because I created the system disk
> with Win XP, and there used to be a DOS mode...
>
> The "system disk" is a floppy I formatted using the option "create MS-DOS
> initializtion disk".
>
> Some partitions are NTFS, others are FAT.
>
> I am trying to use Symantec Ghost, but it can not find the disks and
> partitions. I have used it before, created and restored some images a few
> months ago. Now I can not access it any longer.
>
> Thanks,
>
>
> "Pegasus (MVP)" wrote:
>
> >
> > "User" <User@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> > news
CD800D7-26A8-4030-9B85-21F7299C2D0B@microsoft.com...
> > > Hi
> > >
> > > I am trying to boot in Dos mode, either using a Ghost generated disk,
or a
> > > system disk created in Win XP. Either way, I can not see the hard
drives
> > > properly. I can´t access them via the drive letters, for instance.
> > >
> > > What is happening? How can I correct this?
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> >
> > Your post is a little unclear:
> >
> > - When you say "DOS mode", do you mean DOS as
> > an operating system, or do you mean the "Command Prompt"
> > (which is not DOS at all!)?
> > - What exactly do you mean with a "system disk
> > created in WinXP"?
> > - What are your partitions, FAT32 or NTFS?
> > - What are you actually trying to achieve?
> >
> >
> >