PC Review


Reply
Thread Tools Rate Thread

back all files to an external drive

 
 
=?Utf-8?B?SkM=?=
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      15th May 2007
Hi Folks,

I am having major problems with my windows instalation and have come to the
decision to back up all files on my computer (apart from windows xp) and
start afresh. Not knowing much about these thins I tried to back up to disks,
but it was asking for like 100 disk or more. Is there another way to do this,
perhaps by getting an external drive or something. I have some many files and
programs that I want to keep that I don't want to reinstal windows or wipe my
harddrive.

I apolgise for my lack of knowledge on the subject, but all advise very
welcome and a big big thank you in advance

 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
BillW50
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      15th May 2007
"JC" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:5301AF51-4163-4594-9F7F-(E-Mail Removed)
> Hi Folks,
>
> I am having major problems with my windows instalation and have come
> to the decision to back up all files on my computer (apart from
> windows xp) and start afresh. Not knowing much about these thins I
> tried to back up to disks, but it was asking for like 100 disk or
> more. Is there another way to do this, perhaps by getting an external
> drive or something. I have some many files and programs that I want
> to keep that I don't want to reinstal windows or wipe my harddrive.
>
> I apolgise for my lack of knowledge on the subject, but all advise
> very welcome and a big big thank you in advance


Yes you should do this anyway whether you want to reinstall or not.
External hard drives are a very good way to go. DVD isn't too bad if you
don't have to change discs too often.

And you don't have to reformat and wipe out the current Windows install
anyway. As what works most of the time is a Windows XP Repair.

http://www.michaelstevenstech.com/XPrepairinstall.htm

--
Bill

 
Reply With Quote
 
Alan
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      16th May 2007
Hello JC,

The only files that you will need to back up are those that contain your
OWN data such as documents, music, pictures, etc.

Unless you do an image of your hard drive -- which sounds like it would
defeat your purpose of 'starting over' -- you will have to reinstall all
your applications from original media. Just copying program files to backup,
and then restoring the files, will not work.

Alan

"JC" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:5301AF51-4163-4594-9F7F-(E-Mail Removed)...
> Hi Folks,
>
> I am having major problems with my windows instalation and have come to
> the
> decision to back up all files on my computer (apart from windows xp) and
> start afresh. Not knowing much about these thins I tried to back up to
> disks,
> but it was asking for like 100 disk or more. Is there another way to do
> this,
> perhaps by getting an external drive or something. I have some many files
> and
> programs that I want to keep that I don't want to reinstal windows or wipe
> my
> harddrive.
>
> I apolgise for my lack of knowledge on the subject, but all advise very
> welcome and a big big thank you in advance
>



 
Reply With Quote
 
BillW50
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      16th May 2007
"Alan" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)
> Hello JC,
>
> The only files that you will need to back up are those that contain
> your OWN data such as documents, music, pictures, etc.
>
> Unless you do an image of your hard drive -- which sounds like it
> would defeat your purpose of 'starting over' -- you will have to
> reinstall all your applications from original media. Just copying
> program files to backup, and then restoring the files, will not work.
>
> Alan


Not true if you do a Windows XP Repair.

http://www.michaelstevenstech.com/XPrepairinstall.htm

--
Bill
 
Reply With Quote
 
Rock
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      16th May 2007
"JC" wrote
> Hi Folks,
>
> I am having major problems with my windows instalation and have come to
> the
> decision to back up all files on my computer (apart from windows xp) and
> start afresh. Not knowing much about these thins I tried to back up to
> disks,
> but it was asking for like 100 disk or more. Is there another way to do
> this,
> perhaps by getting an external drive or something. I have some many files
> and
> programs that I want to keep that I don't want to reinstal windows or wipe
> my
> harddrive.
>
> I apolgise for my lack of knowledge on the subject, but all advise very
> welcome and a big big thank you in advance


JC, I see by your later post you have an OEM installation of XP with only a
recovery CD, not an XP installation CD so the repair install suggested by
others will not work. The recovery method provided by your OEM is a
destructive recovery. 3rd party apps will have to be reinstalled from
original media. Restore data from the backup.

Yes an external hard drive is a good place to store backups. You an buy one
preassembled or put one together for much less cost, and it's not hard to
do. Buy a bare hard drive (white box - which doesn't come with a utility CD
and is much cheaper) and an external drive enclosure. Get these from any
computer hardware supplier, such as Newegg.com. Enclosures are in the $20
range. A 320 GB external drive setup put together this way will cost you
less than $100.

I recommend you use a drive imaging program such as Acronis True Image Home
version 10. This can create a compressed image of the drive. Images can be
full, incremental or differential so subsequent images take much less time
and space. Imaging can be on a drive or partition basis. Restores can be
done on a file, partition or drive basis. It also does file backup and
drive cloning.



--
Rock [MS-MVP User/Shell]

 
Reply With Quote
 
Alan
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      16th May 2007
Yes, you're right, unless something goes awry with the repair installation.

However, the OP stated that he wanted to "start afresh." I took that to mean
that he wants to wipe out everything on the hard drive and do a clean
install of XP.

Alan

"BillW50" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> "Alan" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:(E-Mail Removed)
>> Hello JC,
>>
>> The only files that you will need to back up are those that contain
>> your OWN data such as documents, music, pictures, etc.
>>
>> Unless you do an image of your hard drive -- which sounds like it
>> would defeat your purpose of 'starting over' -- you will have to
>> reinstall all your applications from original media. Just copying
>> program files to backup, and then restoring the files, will not work.
>>
>> Alan

>
> Not true if you do a Windows XP Repair.
>
> http://www.michaelstevenstech.com/XPrepairinstall.htm
>
> --
> Bill



 
Reply With Quote
 
BillW50
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      16th May 2007
"Rock" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)

[snip]

> JC, I see by your later post you have an OEM installation of XP with
> only a recovery CD, not an XP installation CD so the repair install
> suggested by others will not work. The recovery method provided by
> your OEM is a destructive recovery. 3rd party apps will have to be
> reinstalled from original media. Restore data from the backup.


[snip]

I missed that one Rock, thanks! Although purchasing a retail Windows XP
install disk can be quite helpful in these cases. I do so all of the
time. Just to solve these kinds of problems.

[snip]

> I recommend you use a drive imaging program such as Acronis True
> Image Home version 10. This can create a compressed image of the
> drive. Images can be full, incremental or differential so subsequent
> images take much less time and space. Imaging can be on a drive or
> partition basis. Restores can be done on a file, partition or drive
> basis. It also does file backup and drive cloning.


Why don't you recommend Windows Backup? And what is wrong with just
copying the OS files the old way? See:

"BillW50" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)
Subject: Making backups by just copying files
Date: Tue, 15 May 2007 20:16:48 -0500


--
Bill

 
Reply With Quote
 
Rock
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      16th May 2007
"BillW50" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote

> "Rock" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote
> [snip]
>
>> JC, I see by your later post you have an OEM installation of XP with
>> only a recovery CD, not an XP installation CD so the repair install
>> suggested by others will not work. The recovery method provided by
>> your OEM is a destructive recovery. 3rd party apps will have to be
>> reinstalled from original media. Restore data from the backup.

>
> [snip]
>
> I missed that one Rock, thanks! Although purchasing a retail Windows XP
> install disk can be quite helpful in these cases. I do so all of the time.
> Just to solve these kinds of problems.


Bill, you mean you have run a repair install using an generic OEM or retail
XP installation CD on an installation of a branded OEM XP? What about the
product key that you have to enter to do the repair install?

> [snip]
>
>> I recommend you use a drive imaging program such as Acronis True
>> Image Home version 10. This can create a compressed image of the
>> drive. Images can be full, incremental or differential so subsequent
>> images take much less time and space. Imaging can be on a drive or
>> partition basis. Restores can be done on a file, partition or drive
>> basis. It also does file backup and drive cloning.

>
> Why don't you recommend Windows Backup? And what is wrong with just
> copying the OS files the old way? See:


I'm not particularly found of your "the old way". I see that as a piece
meal approach. Besides I don't see how that technique allows you to restore
to a bare hard drive to get a working system in the same condition.

At one time I used ntbackup but gave up on it long ago. I tested the ASR
recovery and found it to be, lengthy and cumbersome, and beyond that it did
not restore the system to it's working state. Some apps in my test
environment did not work properly on restore and had to be
uninstalled/reinstalled. Of course one doesn't have to use ASR, ntbackup
can be used for file backup, but I was looking for a better all around
solution. Ntbackup cannot backup to CDs unless 3rd party packet writing
software is installed and even then it cannot span CDs. It cannot backup to
DVD. Lastly I have seen enough posts were suddenly ntbackup was no longer
working, but fixes for that are almost non existent, that I could find,
requiring a reinstall of the OS. I know others have had on going success
with it.

Based on all this I moved to a drive imaging solution. Originally I used
Drive Image from Powerquest, and still have it installed on one XP
installation. Unfortunately they were bought out by Symantec, the
technology from it going into the Ghost platform starting with Ghost 9. DI
is not compatible with Vista, so when I started running that, I moved to
Acronis True Image Home, version 10. It runs in both Vista and XP. It can
be setup to run as a scheduled task, so user interaction is minimal. I just
have to remember to have the right external drive connected and powered up.

I tested it, including restores under normal operating conditions and found
it is an excellent choice, fast, flexible, and reliable. That's why I
recommend it as a backup/recovery solution.

--
Rock [MS-MVP User/Shell]

 
Reply With Quote
 
BillW50
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      17th May 2007
"Rock" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:%23wzmW9$(E-Mail Removed)
> "BillW50" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote
>
>> "Rock" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote
>> [snip]
>>
>>> JC, I see by your later post you have an OEM installation of XP with
>>> only a recovery CD, not an XP installation CD so the repair install
>>> suggested by others will not work. The recovery method provided by
>>> your OEM is a destructive recovery. 3rd party apps will have to be
>>> reinstalled from original media. Restore data from the backup.

>>
>> [snip]
>>
>> I missed that one Rock, thanks! Although purchasing a retail Windows
>> XP install disk can be quite helpful in these cases. I do so all of
>> the time. Just to solve these kinds of problems.

>
> Bill, you mean you have run a repair install using an generic OEM or
> retail XP installation CD on an installation of a branded OEM XP? What
> about the product key that you have to enter to do the repair
> install?


Yes and that is the other reason for buying the retail Windows XP
version. As you also get a key with the purchase.

>> [snip]
>>
>>> I recommend you use a drive imaging program such as Acronis True
>>> Image Home version 10. This can create a compressed image of the
>>> drive. Images can be full, incremental or differential so
>>> subsequent images take much less time and space. Imaging can be on
>>> a drive or partition basis. Restores can be done on a file,
>>> partition or drive basis. It also does file backup and drive
>>> cloning.

>>
>> Why don't you recommend Windows Backup? And what is wrong with just
>> copying the OS files the old way? See:

>
> I'm not particularly found of your "the old way". I see that as a
> piece meal approach. Besides I don't see how that technique allows
> you to restore to a bare hard drive to get a working system in the
> same condition.


I don't either. As it seems to me that you have to do a repair or a full
install anyway. Then and only then you can use ntbackup I think.

> At one time I used ntbackup but gave up on it long ago. I tested the
> ASR recovery and found it to be, lengthy and cumbersome, and beyond
> that it did not restore the system to it's working state. Some apps
> in my test environment did not work properly on restore and had to be
> uninstalled/reinstalled. Of course one doesn't have to use ASR,
> ntbackup can be used for file backup, but I was looking for a better
> all around solution. Ntbackup cannot backup to CDs unless 3rd party
> packet writing software is installed and even then it cannot span
> CDs. It cannot backup to DVD. Lastly I have seen enough posts were
> suddenly ntbackup was no longer working, but fixes for that are
> almost non existent, that I could find, requiring a reinstall of the
> OS. I know others have had on going success with it.


Some versions of ntbackup like for Windows 2000 is said to skip over
open files and not report that it did. Well only in the event log if you
looked there after a backup. Windows XP OTOH is said to copy open files
okay.

> Based on all this I moved to a drive imaging solution. Originally I
> used Drive Image from Powerquest, and still have it installed on one
> XP installation. Unfortunately they were bought out by Symantec, the
> technology from it going into the Ghost platform starting with Ghost
> 9. DI is not compatible with Vista, so when I started running that,
> I moved to Acronis True Image Home, version 10. It runs in both
> Vista and XP. It can be setup to run as a scheduled task, so user
> interaction is minimal. I just have to remember to have the right
> external drive connected and powered up.


I used to use another OS, or a boot disk and just xcopy them. Later I
used Partition Magic (starting with v3) to clone OS partitions. I have
Paragon Drive Copy. But I never used it. Maybe I should one day. LOL

> I tested it, including restores under normal operating conditions and
> found it is an excellent choice, fast, flexible, and reliable. That's
> why I recommend it as a backup/recovery solution.


Okay, you convinced me. But 50 bucks for a backup program?

--
Bill

 
Reply With Quote
 
...winston
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      17th May 2007
Rock...just supplemental note and hope it doesn't interfere with the thread, but it does add some variation to the OEM repair yes/no option.

Micron's XP Home and Pro OEM sp2 cd's(sp1 and gold post updating to sp2 via slipstream-I never did obtain a common reason why on the latter) are capable of running an XP repair without destroying the contents of the drive. The product key on the machine is functional for repair or clean install. The Cd provided is not an image restoration or tool to access a hidden partition.

..winston

"Rock" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:%23wzmW9$(E-Mail Removed)...
: Bill, you mean you have run a repair install using an generic OEM or retail
: XP installation CD on an installation of a branded OEM XP? What about the
: product key that you have to enter to do the repair install?

 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools
Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Getting .pst files from external hard drive back into Outlook Shelley Microsoft Outlook Discussion 11 30th Oct 2009 06:09 PM
Can't find back up files on external hard drive Mjaeb Windows Vista File Management 1 16th May 2009 03:15 AM
Windows XP Backup to back up files found on an EXTERNAL hard drive =?Utf-8?B?c2Rn?= Windows XP Help 4 29th Oct 2007 03:46 AM
Back-up of files & programs to External Hard-Drive =?Utf-8?B?TWFyaWU=?= Microsoft Access 1 24th Jun 2005 08:10 AM
Back Up Files to an External Hard Drive Ralph Prince Windows XP General 2 24th Aug 2003 05:34 PM


Features
 

Advertising
 

Newsgroups
 


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:03 AM.