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BillWoodruff wrote: a 1.5 gig
Isn't that a wee bit small?
Marc
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Marc Clifton wrote: Isn't that a wee bit small? Why, "yes," Brother Marc: for a man of your Gargantuan stature 1.5 gigs would not back-up a smidgen's-worth of those of your neurons hat contain only the memory of one day !
I use the term "Gargantuan" here because, unfortunately, as in the case of "schadenfreude," English has no "native" word that refers directly to the weltanschauung of his fellow-giant son, "Pantagruel," of whose philosophy's guiding ethos Rabelais wrote: "une certaine gaîté d'esprit confite dans le mépris des choses fortuites" ... "a certain gaiety of mind pickled in the scorn of fortuitous things."
cheers, Bill
«I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center» Kurt Vonnegut.
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A serious question: Which app did you use to create the image when the drive was fried?
How do we preserve the wisdom men will need,
when their violent passions are spent?
- The Lost Horizon
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I was using the MS Win 8.1 file history => create system image facility. Years ago I used to use "Drive Snapshot," a lean/mean excellent (commercial) utility, but, as I went on to Win 7/8, I just used the built-in Win facilities.
thanks, Bill
«I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center» Kurt Vonnegut.
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Thanks for the response!
How do we preserve the wisdom men will need,
when their violent passions are spent?
- The Lost Horizon
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If you are asking because you need to do one, I'm currently trying the free version of APMEI Backupper[^] as I'm looking for something before I update to Win10 next month. So far, I've created an image, but I need to do a trial restore which means dismantling the PC to fit a "disposable" disk so I'll try it probably this weekend. I'll generate a Windows System Image tonight and compare them.
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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I have several questions about the same thing, I mean, how can you determine that a disk image save can really restore without physically removing the hard drive and temporarily installing a similar drive and then trying to restore the system?
Does the temporary hard drive have to match the original exactly? What about the boot sector?
How does this work with laptops (my current system is a lappie)? I have never opened it up. I would have to go out and buy a spare hard drive to even attempt this.
How can you verify that ALL the data was restored - just take another disk image and compare the disk images? Would the second disk image be correct if the hard drives had different sizes (the temporary COULD be smaller as long as there was enough space to restore the data , right?)
Back in 2000 - 2007 I did many disk image saves and restores, but I used PowerQuest, ran XP on a desktop, and never changes the hardware. Now that I am on a Pavilion, running W7, and using the internal tools, I just wonder "What would happen if.....".
Dave.
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It's a real problem: if you don't test a backup by doing a "worst case" restore trial then you can't have confidence that you have everything you need!
So with images, you do need a "dead" computer to restore onto - which in practice means swapping out the HDD for me as the hardware has to be correct for the restored image to work afterwards. (Fortunately, I just upgraded to a new 16TB NAS, so I have 4 * 1TB HDDs in my old one that I want to erase before I sell the old box anyway...)
Even with "normal" backups, you do need to do a trial restore to be sure that your media works, you have backed up the right files, and that it actually does something! I've had occasions when I didn't know the backup hardware has broken, storing black disks off site for a year or two until I needed to restore... Loads of swear words were involved here.
And I've known companies where backups of the wrong disk were religiously completed at the end of every week.
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
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OG,
Thank you for the reply.
One thing I finally figured out, W7 Pro will not write an image to a GPT formatted (4 TB drive). It goes through the motions, but crashes with an error at the very end. I had to write the images to a smaller (1/2 TB) hard drive, then copy the created directory to the 4TB normal backup driveS (note the plural - never trust a backup to a single drive).
Another thing, the image program tells you how big of a flash drive you would need to do the save. I tried it with a flash drive of that size and it crashed at the very end (after I had gone out and bought some 16 B flash drives just for the image saves). It turns out that it really needed 18.1 GB instead of just the 16 GB it claimed it needed (I found this out when I finally tried the 1/2 TB drive the first time).
Another major change I've noticed, W7 Pro has an entirely new Windows Explorer than W7 home premium (that I have on my own lappie). Mine looks and reacts just like the old XP Explorer. The Pro version has a drastically different interface, i.e. there is no more Shift Delete to just delete a file/directory, it copies it to the recycle bin and you have to empty it to get rid of it. There is a menu option to always just delete the file, but that is kind of dangerous.
I guess I'll have to learn how to get the hard drive out of the lappie, get a new replacement and install it and then try to restore it. If it works, then take another image save (to the 1/2 TB drive) and FC compare all the files created. I wonder how many places I will find date/time differences???
OBTW, this system is the wife's, and if I totally break it, then "Nobody knows the trouble I've seen, nobody knows...."
Dave.
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As a pc support tech by trade I can tell you today's drives are criminally crap.
They are a unthinkable place to put anything you hold dear.
Back them up every night and if possible backup the backups.
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And backup the backups of the backups. At least get yourself a Blue Ray drive that will hold 25GB on a single disc and burn your data to a set of BR discs.
How do we preserve the wisdom men will need,
when their violent passions are spent?
- The Lost Horizon
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Cornelius Henning wrote: get yourself a Blue Ray drive that will hold 25GB on a single disc and burn your data to a set of BR discs. Thanks, Brother Cornelius, please respond by private e-mail to this message with your credit card information, and a link to which on-line store you would like me to purchase said item with.
yours, Bill
«I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center» Kurt Vonnegut.
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My most sincere apologies! I did not take into account that a Blue Ray drive is so exorbitantly expensive!
How do we preserve the wisdom men will need,
when their violent passions are spent?
- The Lost Horizon
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Bill,
Can you pull the HDD out of the USB enclosure and place the HDD directly in a computer to see if it is visible in the BIOS?
If you do this, can see the HDD in the BIOS but Windows says it is not formatted, get the following.
Download Parted Magic (about USD$10.00), boot from the disk and see if you can mount it directly from the Linux based desktop. If this fails, then open the Terminal and run Testdisk.
If you get this far, search for a tutorial on line about using this to rescue data/fix the partition. If you can't find it, give me a yell and I will find where I put this link.
Michael Martin
Australia
"I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So I had to leave the place as soon as possible."
- Mr.Prakash One Fine Saturday. 24/04/2004
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Brother Michael, thanks very much for this very practical response !
For unknown reasons (possibly a teaser designed to lull me back into somnolence while the demons prepare an even greater misfortune), said WD hard-drive has re-appeared in the Bios after many reboots. I am now running chkdsk with options /f /r /x ... I see it's already fixed a few clusters, but it will take an eternity to complete the job.
cheers, Bill
«I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center» Kurt Vonnegut.
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I have a seemingly dead 2TB USB drive, coincidentally also a WD drive.
I will try to mount the drive directly and see if I can salvage it.
Thanks for the information Michael.
Once you lose your pride the rest is easy.
In the end, only three things matter: how much you loved, how gently you lived, and how gracefully you let go of things not meant for you. – Buddha
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You sure they're not just encrypted?
With full installs of 8.1, MS decided that everything should be encrypted. If you did a system backup to the drive, I wouldn't be shocked to find MS decided to encrypt it too.. for your data safety, of course. I don't know if their encryption goes so far as the partition table or not. Also, if it was a USB drive, it might have decided you asked it to wipe the drive and use it as a bootable recovery drive.. and that certainly would be encrypted if the original install was.
If the drive shows up under Linux, you may need to blast a few MB of zeros over the front if it before you can recreate the partition table. I've had to recover a few hard drives that way over the years. Windows is way too trusting of whatever garbage data is on the disk and can get terminally confused.
We can program with only 1's, but if all you've got are zeros, you've got nothing.
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patbob wrote: You sure they're not just encrypted?
Yes I used to use it to play movies on my TV - which will not accept an encrypted drive - and then after a severe thunder storm, when I wasn't home to disconnect it, it failed.
Unfortunately, I also used it to back up other things, which are now beyond my ability to access.
Once you lose your pride the rest is easy.
In the end, only three things matter: how much you loved, how gently you lived, and how gracefully you let go of things not meant for you. – Buddha
modified 4-Jun-15 14:01pm.
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If I may be so bold to suggest forget buying Parted Magic and use the http://ubuntu-rescue-remix.org/. Follow the instructions on https://help.ubuntu.com/community/DataRecovery. DO NOT try and fix the failing drive as you will reduce your chances of success. The data recovery page will have you make an image of the failing drive. The more errors on the drive the longer the image will take. Even something as small as a 2TB drive can take weeks to image. From there you can work on the image.
Glenn
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BillWoodruff wrote: it appears with a red content-utilized bar rather than the usual blue ... signifying, I guess, "wounded."
Doesn't that just mean it's running low on space?
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Do you think I can understand plausible, rational, explanations at a time like this ? I'd say my current mental state must be (I guess) like that of many newcomers on QA.
cheers, Bill
«I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center» Kurt Vonnegut.
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Sorry to hear that - it's horrible when it happens.
Going forward if you have the spare cash you may want to consider some sort of cloud online backup.
I recently bought 1 terabyte of dropbox storage for 79Ggbp for one year together with a "restore any file to any point in the year" service for 29gbp.
It's not a huge outlay when you consider the amount of time and effort backups and storing and retrieving those backups from a safe location takes.
(I will still be taking images every 6 months for my own peace of mind)
“That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”
― Christopher Hitchens
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Thanks, Guy, I have been thinking about purchasing some "cloud-space," and, since I've used DropBox for years now, considered DropBox.
What holds me back, however, is the thought of how long it would take me to upload 900+ gigs of stuff, given that my internet connection here (Thailand) is a relatively slow ADSL, and I am too cheap to pay a lot for a faster connection.
cheers, Bill
«I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center» Kurt Vonnegut.
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Good point - it will take a while to upload the data.
It took me around four evenings(24hrs) to upload 40Gb of data on a 20mbps line - it's difficult to say whether it is the number of files or size of files which slows things down(although intuitively one might think it is size that matters it's not always the case when copying data.)
I did my research before buying the space and Dropbox came out cheaper than google and Amazon by a long shot.
I hope you manage to recover all if not some of your data.
“That which can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.”
― Christopher Hitchens
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BillWoodruff wrote: What holds me back, however, is the thought of how long it would take me to upload 900+ gigs of stuff, given that my internet connection here (Thailand) is a relatively slow ADSL, and I am too cheap to pay a lot for a faster connection.
Relax Bill. When you are retired you have nothing in more abundance than time.
Once you lose your pride the rest is easy.
In the end, only three things matter: how much you loved, how gently you lived, and how gracefully you let go of things not meant for you. – Buddha
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