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Jun 27th, 2002, 04:16 AM
#1
Thread Starter
Lively Member
Copying hdd's
I've just got a new harddrive id like to use as my master and want to copy the settings/files from the hdd im using now. But i've been told its not as easy as it sounds, and need to use a program?
My software never has bugs. It just develops random features...
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Jun 27th, 2002, 04:32 AM
#2
-= B u g S l a y e r =-
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Jun 27th, 2002, 05:47 AM
#3
Thread Starter
Lively Member
Ah cheers. but seeing has im only gonna use it once is there no free programs that will do the same?
My software never has bugs. It just develops random features...
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Jun 27th, 2002, 06:12 AM
#4
-= B u g S l a y e r =-
how about this then http://www.twocows.com/system/preview/222353.html
maybe you can use this without having to buy it... not sure
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Jun 27th, 2002, 06:13 AM
#5
-= B u g S l a y e r =-
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Jun 27th, 2002, 10:47 AM
#6
Black Cat
If you bought a retail hard drive, it might even come with a program that can do this for you.
Josh
Get these: Mozilla Opera OpenBSD
I have books for sale: "MCSD in a Nutshell" and "VB Distributed Exam Cram" - PM me for details. Will also trade for a decent ATX Pentium 2 MB/CPU/RAM combo.
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Jun 27th, 2002, 11:05 AM
#7
Frenzied Member
Similar to what JoshT said, you can download a utility to do this for you, perhaps, on your manufacturer's site.
I'm bringing geeky back...
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Jun 28th, 2002, 04:44 PM
#8
Frenzied Member
Sorry I'm late to the party
I always do through DOS. I believe the command is:
Code:
xcopy D: C: /h /e /c /r /y
Thats just from memory but I'm pretty sure it is it... you may want to double check my peramiters.
Michael
I'm off to GalahTech, hope to see you there.
If you don't like the rules they make, refuse to play their game. -- Steve Ignorant.
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Jun 29th, 2002, 11:03 AM
#9
NO you didnt quite get it.
You have to include /s to get subdirectories.
BUT you can download a trialware version of norton ghost from symantec.com and it will work great.
im not sure but after you do the xcopy you might need to run this
sys c: d: It copies over system files and makes the drive bootable.
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Jul 1st, 2002, 07:20 AM
#10
Fanatic Member
Re: Copying hdd's
Originally posted by T0MMY
I've just got a new harddrive id like to use as my master and want to copy the settings/files from the hdd im using now. But i've been told its not as easy as it sounds, and need to use a program?
drive2drive will do it and is free
 Looking for a friendly intelligent chat forum? Visit the white-hart.net 
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Jul 1st, 2002, 09:51 AM
#11
Frenzied Member
Drive Image from PowerQuest is well worth the $50 to $60 American, and can sometimes be found at a discount.
I use DI to backup up my system. Whenever I do something significant, I first make an Image of my two major partitions. If anything goes wrong, I restore from the images. The images have everything: Registry, device drivers, files, OS, desktop setup, et cetera.
Live long & prosper.
The Dinosaur from prehistoric era prior to computers.
Eschew obfuscation!
If a billion people believe a foolish idea, it is still a foolish idea!
VB.net 2010 Express
64Bit & 32Bit Windows 7 & Windows XP. I run 4 operating systems on a single PC.
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Jul 1st, 2002, 01:18 PM
#12
Fanatic Member
Originally posted by Guv
Drive Image from PowerQuest is well worth the $50 to $60 American, and can sometimes be found at a discount.
I use DI to backup up my system. Whenever I do something significant, I first make an Image of my two major partitions. If anything goes wrong, I restore from the images. The images have everything: Registry, device drivers, files, OS, desktop setup, et cetera.
I do the same with Drive2Drive and it has saved a lot of problems.
 Looking for a friendly intelligent chat forum? Visit the white-hart.net 
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Jul 1st, 2002, 06:09 PM
#13
Frenzied Member
I thought Ghost was free....I guess not....Kazaa thinks so too....
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Jul 2nd, 2002, 02:07 AM
#14
ok i did some experimenting since i needed to clone a drive myself.
1. I was wrong before. You don't need /s if you use /e.
2. if you use win xp, you cant do xcopy to transfer everything because it will give a sharing violation and refuse to transfer some vital system files.
3. Xcopy32 for dos (assuming you didnt convert to ntfs) doesn't copy files with the system or hidden attributes set, and there is no way to make it do so. Plus it doesn't duplicate long file names unless you use it in a shell.
4. Not one of the mirror programs available on download.com worked for me. Even though my hard drives were not only the same size, but in fact the same MODEL, it said there wasnt enough room on the destination drive to copy the source.
Since i am copying from one drive to another of the exact same model and size, i am going to try going to that drive's website and looking for dup. programs there.
Good luck.
My whole experience was aimed at duplicating my xp install so i wouldnt have to come up with a new code. However, calling microsoft and telling them that i broke the 1st computer got me a new code anyway.
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Jul 2nd, 2002, 02:20 AM
#15
ok i found a program on maxtor's web site. its free of course, and it doesnt care what os, etc. your drive has on it.
http://<br />
<a rel="nofollow" hre...24023.html</a>
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Jul 7th, 2002, 01:04 AM
#16
Hyperactive Member
Do what I did when I got my 40GByte Maxtor drive. I went through all my game folders and found the save games. I then took anything else I wanted to keep(all my pictures, sound, music... 5GBytes of stuff total) and just dragged everything I wanted to keep over (AFTER REINSTALLING WINDOWS). Then, you just reinstall all of the programs and your system is good as new. Do this ONLY if those utilities don't work for you...
Designer/Programmer of the Comtech Operating System(CTOS)
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