Archived from groups: microsoft.public.windowsxp.customize (
More info?)
I don't recall Norton having the option to copy one partition to another
partition, but if it did, that would not imply one single file. It means to
me that the two partitions are identical.
What I remember is that Norton Ghost ask you if you want to Image a disk or
Image a partition. Either one you choose will created a single compressed
file with the file extension *.gho. Once you have this single image file,
you can restore to a disk or partition. Yes!, after the restore, the
partition can boot from. It is a perfect bit by bit copy.
I can't tell you any more.
"Colin Bearfield" <c.bearfield@ntlworld.com> wrote in message
news:ab7dp01j3o1bsvc0ggpik27jbrg85ua6ui@4ax.com...
> On Sat, 13 Nov 2004 20:44:26 GMT, " JCO" <joliviero@hotmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> >If you HD is partitioned, then that is good. That gives you the option
to
> >create an image of you C drive and store it on the D partition.
> >
> >The option, Clone Partition to Partition means copying a Partition to
> >another partition, therefore the two partitions are identical (both are
> >intact completely).
>
> Do you mean that it would not save everything to a file, because it
> did today.
>
> The intention would be to use the result for restoring after a
> problem. Would this give a bootable restore?
>
> The option to clone a partition to an image means that
> >it will compress your entire partition (your C-Drive) into a single file.
>
> Isn't this so with the former method? Partition to partition produced
> a file in a partition. Unfortunately it hit the 2Gb ceiling that I'd
> completely forgotten about.
>
> >This file can be copied to a DVD or stored on your D-Drive, if you wish.
> >You can view or extract parts of this image by using the Ghost Explorer.
If
> >you format the C-Drive (because of some virus), you gives you can restore
> >your C-Partitions from that DVD (or D Drive) by restoring from the Image.
>
> I understand the word image. it is generally used to mean something
> that can be restored in bootable condition. Norton seems to use to
> mean something else. At the time (3 years ago) it was admitted that
> the manual doesn't agree with the Ghost commands. Why can't they just
> say something like "Partition to partition yields a file that can be
> used to restore a bootable partition" or "partition to image yields a
> precise copy of data but can't be used to restore to bootable
> condition", or whatever the truth is.
>
> >
> >I hope this makes sense. Ghost is a very powerful tool. I use mine from
a
> >disk, not the computer (while it is running). To me, it is much more
> >powerful that way. I put in a disk and boot from it. From there, you
can
> >create and image or restore from an existing image. You choose if you
are
> >working with the entire harddrive or just a partition, in each case.
> >
> Right at the end, this might be the crucial difference. Does on do
> just the partition and the other do the entire physical drive?
>
> Best wishes
>
> Colin
> ><me@privacy.net> wrote in message
> >news:5vocp0l09qt3kecli8tha1rblq49ijkabl@4ax.com...
> >> Hi
> >>
> >> 4 years ago I bought a copy of Norton Ghost 2001. I used to use it to
> >> make a restore copy of my boot partition. Today I needed to use it in
> >> an emergency to make a copy of my boot partition in case I lost it in
> >> the next move. I couldn't remember the method.
> >>
> >> There are two options which seem the same. One is cloning partition to
> >> partition (local) and the other is cloning partition to image (local).
> >> I chose the former and happily didn't need it.
> >>
> >> Does anybody know the right one?
> >>
> >> Sorry if this is off topic, I couldn't find any suitable group.
> >>
> >> Colin
> >>
> >
>