DL,
I've taken this way beyond the scope of the newsgroup now, sorry, but I
do have a question about Acronis. (I do know that Windows XP setup
gives the option to load extra drivers before proceeding, and the mobo
did come with a CD, which presumably has those drivers; I'll try this
sometime later this week.)
Norton Ghost uses a "boot disk" (you actually have to create this
disk). When booted, it loads PC-DOS (think 1985 here) into memory, the
idea being that your hard drive(s) are not being accessed during an
image transfer. The boot disk must contain, and PC-DOS must load,
appropriate drivers for any hard drives or optical drives accessed
during the image transfer. Drivers for IDE hard drives are loaded by
default. I believe that the RAID controller on my mobo requires a
PC-DOS driver, and neither the mobo or RAID chip vendor seem to offer
drivers for such an old platform (that I can find, at least).
My question is this: Does Acronis use the same approach -- a boot disk
and some independent OS that loads from the boot disk -- or does it
somehow run under my existing Windows XP?
ed
> You need to read the mobo manual regarding the usage of sata/raid, as it
> varies by manu/mobo.
[quoted text clipped - 30 lines]
> the
> > > > other not, for example a desktop to a laptop.
DL - 29 Nov 2006 15:17 GMT
If the F6 option is used the drivers have to be loaded from Floppy.
The cd supplied with the mobo will usually have a 'make floppy' app to
create the drivers floppy.
I've used True Image Home version to clone but never to a sata drive.
From my checking Acronis help I'm unclear as to whether default drivers are
included with True Image or whether the external drivers option is only
available to server versions of True Image
The Acronis CD is bootable, as are any cd's created
> DL,
>
[quoted text clipped - 54 lines]
> > the
> > > > > other not, for example a desktop to a laptop.