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#1
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Macrium Reflect is THE tool for making backup copies of Windows XP
Long ago, when I first started using disk managers (probably
PartitionMagic) and shortly thereafter stumbled onto the practice of copying the operating system, day by day it slowly and pleasantly took a big load off of my shoulders. Maybe that practice is just for enthusiasts. Whatever. If you need to do it, Macrium Reflect is your tool. Making copies of Windows and occasionally restoring one encourages you to keep track of and backup important files, but most of us should learn to keep a backup of important files anyway. On my main PC, I have an SSD main drive and a Raptor secondary drive. Macrium Reflect copies the main drive to the secondary drive in the form of a compressed file that is about 65% of the main drive size. Those copies are browsable, so I can copy files from them. Recently, motherboard trouble caused me to revert to my backup PC. Installed the Raptor on the old system and made some space at its beginning. From the Macrium Reflect restore CD, took one of the compressed copies of the SSD drive from the Raptor and copied it to the beginning of the Raptor. Booted into Windows safe mode. Stopped at the logon prompt since Fast User Switching had been disabled. Sat there for a while, while Windows XP reconfigured the mouse and keyboard drivers for the old motherboard. After getting to the desktop, installed the old PC's motherboard drivers. Rebooted. Now this thing is almost precisely the same as it was on my fast PC. The only noticed exception (besides the slowness) is something to do with DirectX when opening a resource hungry game "Unable to create Direct3D" (not asking for help), maybe because the video card is older. Being able to take a compressed copy of my main system SSD drive Windows XP installation and copy it to a different drive in a completely different system is IMO very impressive. Some of that positive result had to do with Windows XP itself, but still... Have not tested Macrium Reflect with Vista or 7. With each new operating system, Microsoft complicates the process of making Windows backups, so who knows. FWIW. Years ago, I purchased one of their other products Partition Manager but was not very impressed. The free edition of Macrium Reflect requires using a restore boot CD and the restore copy is very slow, but that is not a problem if you can find something else to do, unless you need to do restore copies frequently. Apparently the paid-for version allows making the restore copy in a special Windows mode (probably after rebooting and before the desktop appears), that might be faster. Also, its user interface is poorly designed for my white text on a black background system (not a problem). |
#2
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Macrium Reflect is THE tool for making backup copies of Windows XP
John Doe wrote:
Long ago, when I first started using disk managers (probably PartitionMagic) and shortly thereafter stumbled onto the practice of copying the operating system, day by day it slowly and pleasantly took a big load off of my shoulders. Maybe that practice is just for enthusiasts. Whatever. If you need to do it, Macrium Reflect is your tool. Making copies of Windows and occasionally restoring one encourages you to keep track of and backup important files, but most of us should learn to keep a backup of important files anyway. On my main PC, I have an SSD main drive and a Raptor secondary drive. Macrium Reflect copies the main drive to the secondary drive in the form of a compressed file that is about 65% of the main drive size. Those copies are browsable, so I can copy files from them. Recently, motherboard trouble caused me to revert to my backup PC. Installed the Raptor on the old system and made some space at its beginning. From the Macrium Reflect restore CD, took one of the compressed copies of the SSD drive from the Raptor and copied it to the beginning of the Raptor. Booted into Windows safe mode. Stopped at the logon prompt since Fast User Switching had been disabled. Sat there for a while, while Windows XP reconfigured the mouse and keyboard drivers for the old motherboard. After getting to the desktop, installed the old PC's motherboard drivers. Rebooted. Now this thing is almost precisely the same as it was on my fast PC. The only noticed exception (besides the slowness) is something to do with DirectX when opening a resource hungry game "Unable to create Direct3D" (not asking for help), maybe because the video card is older. Being able to take a compressed copy of my main system SSD drive Windows XP installation and copy it to a different drive in a completely different system is IMO very impressive. Some of that positive result had to do with Windows XP itself, but still... Have not tested Macrium Reflect with Vista or 7. With each new operating system, Microsoft complicates the process of making Windows backups, so who knows. FWIW. Years ago, I purchased one of their other products Partition Manager but was not very impressed. The free edition of Macrium Reflect requires using a restore boot CD and the restore copy is very slow, but that is not a problem if you can find something else to do, unless you need to do restore copies frequently. Apparently the paid-for version allows making the restore copy in a special Windows mode (probably after rebooting and before the desktop appears), that might be faster. Also, its user interface is poorly designed for my white text on a black background system (not a problem). I prefer Acronis True Image myself. |
#3
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Macrium Reflect is THE tool for making backup copies of Windows XP
"Rod Speed" rod.speed.aaa gmail.com wrote:
John Doe wrote: Long ago, when I first started using disk managers (probably PartitionMagic) and shortly thereafter stumbled onto the practice of copying the operating system, day by day it slowly and pleasantly took a big load off of my shoulders. Maybe that practice is just for enthusiasts. Whatever. If you need to do it, Macrium Reflect is your tool. Making copies of Windows and occasionally restoring one encourages you to keep track of and backup important files, but most of us should learn to keep a backup of important files anyway. On my main PC, I have an SSD main drive and a Raptor secondary drive. Macrium Reflect copies the main drive to the secondary drive in the form of a compressed file that is about 65% of the main drive size. Those copies are browsable, so I can copy files from them. Recently, motherboard trouble caused me to revert to my backup PC. Installed the Raptor on the old system and made some space at its beginning. From the Macrium Reflect restore CD, took one of the compressed copies of the SSD drive from the Raptor and copied it to the beginning of the Raptor. Booted into Windows safe mode. Stopped at the logon prompt since Fast User Switching had been disabled. Sat there for a while, while Windows XP reconfigured the mouse and keyboard drivers for the old motherboard. After getting to the desktop, installed the old PC's motherboard drivers. Rebooted. Now this thing is almost precisely the same as it was on my fast PC. The only noticed exception (besides the slowness) is something to do with DirectX when opening a resource hungry game "Unable to create Direct3D" (not asking for help), maybe because the video card is older. Being able to take a compressed copy of my main system SSD drive Windows XP installation and copy it to a different drive in a completely different system is IMO very impressive. Some of that positive result had to do with Windows XP itself, but still... Have not tested Macrium Reflect with Vista or 7. With each new operating system, Microsoft complicates the process of making Windows backups, so who knows. FWIW. Years ago, I purchased one of their other products Partition Manager but was not very impressed. The free edition of Macrium Reflect requires using a restore boot CD and the restore copy is very slow, but that is not a problem if you can find something else to do, unless you need to do restore copies frequently. Apparently the paid-for version allows making the restore copy in a special Windows mode (probably after rebooting and before the desktop appears), that might be faster. Also, its user interface is poorly designed for my white text on a black background system (not a problem). I prefer Acronis True Image myself. I have Acronis Disk Director 10, and its recovery CD can no longer even see my hard drives, there have been zero updates since it was published years ago. -- Path: news.astraweb.com!border2.newsrouter.astraweb.com! news.glorb.com!news2.glorb.com!news.musoftware.de! wum.musoftware.de!fu-berlin.de!uni-berlin.de!individual.net!not-for-mail From: "Rod Speed" rod.speed.aaa gmail.com Newsgroups: alt.comp.hardware.pc-homebuilt,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage Subject: Macrium Reflect is THE tool for making backup copies of Windows XP Date: Thu, 25 Feb 2010 17:35:45 +1100 Lines: 55 Message-ID: 7umk24Fl2jU1 mid.individual.net References: 4b85faf5$0$14687$c3e8da3 news.astraweb.com X-Trace: individual.net Rhf0mnhX6Aiw49wxu/qgXAZ/8LAVbHDYOorIw+8qI1w/O7deU= Cancel-Lock: sha1:N2Qhs4Q1W9h58iJ0a/Lu95cG8XI= X-Priority: 3 X-MSMail-Priority: Normal X-Newsreader: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2900.2670 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2900.2670 X-RFC2646: Format=Flowed; Original |
#4
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Macrium Reflect is THE tool for making backup copies of Windows XP
John Doe wrote
Rod Speed rod.speed.aaa gmail.com wrote John Doe wrote Long ago, when I first started using disk managers (probably PartitionMagic) and shortly thereafter stumbled onto the practice of copying the operating system, day by day it slowly and pleasantly took a big load off of my shoulders. Maybe that practice is just for enthusiasts. Whatever. If you need to do it, Macrium Reflect is your tool. Making copies of Windows and occasionally restoring one encourages you to keep track of and backup important files, but most of us should learn to keep a backup of important files anyway. On my main PC, I have an SSD main drive and a Raptor secondary drive. Macrium Reflect copies the main drive to the secondary drive in the form of a compressed file that is about 65% of the main drive size. Those copies are browsable, so I can copy files from them. Recently, motherboard trouble caused me to revert to my backup PC. Installed the Raptor on the old system and made some space at its beginning. From the Macrium Reflect restore CD, took one of the compressed copies of the SSD drive from the Raptor and copied it to the beginning of the Raptor. Booted into Windows safe mode. Stopped at the logon prompt since Fast User Switching had been disabled. Sat there for a while, while Windows XP reconfigured the mouse and keyboard drivers for the old motherboard. After getting to the desktop, installed the old PC's motherboard drivers. Rebooted. Now this thing is almost precisely the same as it was on my fast PC. The only noticed exception (besides the slowness) is something to do with DirectX when opening a resource hungry game "Unable to create Direct3D" (not asking for help), maybe because the video card is older. Being able to take a compressed copy of my main system SSD drive Windows XP installation and copy it to a different drive in a completely different system is IMO very impressive. Some of that positive result had to do with Windows XP itself, but still... Have not tested Macrium Reflect with Vista or 7. With each new operating system, Microsoft complicates the process of making Windows backups, so who knows. FWIW. Years ago, I purchased one of their other products Partition Manager but was not very impressed. The free edition of Macrium Reflect requires using a restore boot CD and the restore copy is very slow, but that is not a problem if you can find something else to do, unless you need to do restore copies frequently. Apparently the paid-for version allows making the restore copy in a special Windows mode (probably after rebooting and before the desktop appears), that might be faster. Also, its user interface is poorly designed for my white text on a black background system (not a problem). I prefer Acronis True Image myself. I have Acronis Disk Director 10, and its recovery CD can no longer even see my hard drives, there have been zero updates since it was published years ago. There have been plenty of updates for True Image. |
#5
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Macrium Reflect is THE tool for making backup copies of WindowsXP
On 2/24/2010 10:41 PM, John Doe wrote:
"Rod Speed"rod.speed.aaa gmail.com wrote: John Doe wrote: Long ago, when I first started using disk managers (probably PartitionMagic) and shortly thereafter stumbled onto the practice of copying the operating system, day by day it slowly and pleasantly took a big load off of my shoulders. Maybe that practice is just for enthusiasts. Whatever. If you need to do it, Macrium Reflect is your tool. Making copies of Windows and occasionally restoring one encourages you to keep track of and backup important files, but most of us should learn to keep a backup of important files anyway. Snip I have Acronis Disk Director 10, and its recovery CD can no longer even see my hard drives, there have been zero updates since it was published years ago. I've noticed the same thing about Disk Director, but since it's essentially a partition manager, I don't use it that much. TI is my favorite imaging tool; has been since version 7. I use it weekly, copying the images to a second internal drive and an external drive. I even bought the netbook version for a friend! Macrium Reflect is very good; the free version won't do incremental images/backups, IIRC. As always, imho, ymmv. Ron Moore |
#6
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Macrium Reflect is THE tool for making backup copies of WindowsXP
On Feb 25, 8:35*am, "Rod Speed" wrote:
I prefer Acronis True Image myself. You! you post here too? Nowhere is safe. RL |
#7
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Macrium Reflect is THE tool for making backup copies of Windows XP
BTW (Fishface)... On my Windows XP SP3, Macrium Reflect 4.2 does allow
removing the browsed image from Windows Explorer, through the right- click menu "Unmount Macrium Image". |
#8
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Macrium Reflect is THE tool for making backup copies of Windows XP
John Doe wrote:
BTW (Fishface)... On my Windows XP SP3, Macrium Reflect 4.2 does allow removing the browsed image from Windows Explorer, through the right- click menu "Unmount Macrium Image". I went to check this on Win7 64-bit edition, but it wanted to do an update. I should have checked first, but instead allowed the update. The option is there on the right-hand-pane Explorer context menu (but not the left) to unmount the drive, and now the menu choice to "Detach Image" does work. So, it just keeps getting better! That reminds me, time for another backup... |
#9
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Macrium Reflect is THE tool for making backup copies of Windows XP
Playing with Windows defragmentation utility. Eight files could
not be defragmented. So I deleted them and copied them back into place from a backup file. No more fragmented files. That just for fun, no doubt you can do defragmentation better with a different utility if you got one. |
#10
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Macrium Reflect is THE tool for making backup copies of Windows XP
John Doe wrote:
Playing with Windows defragmentation utility. Eight files could not be defragmented. So I deleted them and copied them back into place from a backup file. No more fragmented files. That just for fun, no doubt you can do defragmentation better with a different utility if you got one. Defragging is pointless with modern fast seeking drives, essentially because you dont see much linear access to large files anymore except with media files where the play time is controlled by the media format and so a few extra seeks are completely undetectable, even when a benchmark is used. The only time you can even detect that large files are fragmented with a benchmark is when copying the files and it makes a lot more sense to put files where you want them in the first place and not copy them around. In spades with the few files that a defragger refuses to defrag. |
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