

- NORTON GHOST 9 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS INSTALL
- NORTON GHOST 9 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS 64 BIT
- NORTON GHOST 9 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS 32 BIT
- NORTON GHOST 9 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS FULL
- NORTON GHOST 9 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS ISO
NORTON GHOST 9 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS INSTALL
Space to install Norton Ghost and its related You will need between 430 MB and 1 GB of free Please make sure your computer meets the minimum system requirements: 38Ī.1.2 Windows XP Users (InfraRecorder). 36Ī.1 To burn the Symantec Recovery Disc…. 25Ĥ.1.2 Option 2: “Back up selected files and folders”. 5ġ.2.2 To Complete the Installation.5ĬHAPTER 2. GETTING STARTED.4ġ.1 Before you install….

NORTON GHOST 9 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS FULL
Please see the full user guide provided by Symantec.ĬHAPTER 1. For theĬomplete user manual, including information on the other features of Norton Ghost 15.0, This user guide only covers backing up & recovering the data on your SSD. in order to offer a streamlined data backup & recovery process for "when I read todo backup could do the whole run from pen drive but in reality it doesn't work more than it works.This Quick User Guide was created under Symantec’s authorization by SamsungĮlectronics Co., Ltd. Lisa I gather you were not too impressed with your attempt to install a Windows OS onto a Flash drive?
NORTON GHOST 9 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS 64 BIT
Once the OS on the flash drive checked out ok, I could then install the 64 bit version of Windows 7 onto the laptop's drive.
NORTON GHOST 9 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS 32 BIT
For a new computer, I gather a Lenovo is still a good choice? By the way, how do you think such a computer would react to wiping it's hard drive clean and then installing the Wndows 7 32 bit system on it? This of course would only be a temporary installation until I got a clone of it across to a Flash Drive. Perhaps I better throw in a few hundred extra dollars above that $600 and buy something new. I could look for one on E-Bay where price tags are probably much lower, but you never know what your buying that way. Yes, they look great, but here in Australia where I live, they are asking around 600 or so Australian dollars for them. You probably use it yourself.Īlso, I searched around on line and found a few Lenovo T430 second hand computers. It's a great little program for that function.
NORTON GHOST 9 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS ISO
By the way, I use Rufas to transfer my ISO files onto flash drives. I had a quick look at it, and being from Lenovo it should be a very clean and a totally functional ISO. Thanks for that web address to download the Vista operating system from. I would want it to boot up any modern computer and load the operating system. It was mentioned in a reply to me by one of the technical people at Todo that my cloned OS on a Flash Drive would work as long as it could boot up different computers to the one it was cloned from. Perhaps then, the restoration of a hard drive that has just been completed by Ghost or Todo will require the operator to provide a Product Key again. That's a neat trick how Microsoft manage that. I'm really surprised to hear that a cloned copy from a hard drive's computer would need a separate windows key to activate it. Actually I'm thinking of buying a more modern laptop that will take the Windows 7 32 bit system because I really do prefer it to Vista. I'm pleased to say it worked perfectly!Īs for your comment about "the one key recovery for Vista." I presume that can only be done for a substantial fee. Hello Lisa, Yes, I have made an "Emergency Disk" as the Todo people call it, and only a few months ago I had to make use of it to restore a hard drive's contents on a laptop computer. You should be able to get a 250GB drive for less than $50 on Amazon or some place like that. It doesn't need to be the same capacity as the original, it can be larger or smaller than the original as long as it's capacity is large enough to fit the entire backup. Not sure what size drive you are looking for. SATA drives are relatively inexpensive right now but PATA drives are becoming less available and more expensive. If your computer is from the XT era, it's possible that it takes an IDE or PATA drive and not a SATA drive. The suggested idea to purchase a 2nd disk to do what you wish to do is a good idea and I have done that in the past. Also, as said above, make sure you do an image backup which is an exact copy of the drive. I've never used Ghost 9 but there should be someway to create a restore CD. However, if you encounter a situation where the drive completely failed or the computer cannot boot, you will have no way to restore the backup.

Right now, you can only restore a backup if your computer is still bootable. Without a Restore disk, your backups are potentially useless. You need to create a Restore CD or USB stick immediately.
