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Norton Ghost 9.0
I've received an email from Symantec advertising 'Norton Ghost 9.0'.
Symantec states that it is an advanced program which offers a backup to the computer and gives protection. It sounds interesting but costs £29 and I wonder if it is worth using Norton Ghost. Does anyone have any experience of this program? I would value any comments. Many thanks. Regards, Chas_G |
Re: Norton Ghost 9.0
Chas_G wrote: > I've received an email from Symantec advertising 'Norton Ghost 9.0'. > Symantec states that it is an advanced program which offers a backup > to the computer and gives protection. It sounds interesting but costs > £29 and I wonder if it is worth using Norton Ghost. > > Does anyone have any experience of this program? I would value any > comments. It's a multicast ghosting application that allows you to "ghost" disk images from one PC to another, and take backup images from PC's, it has other function too. "gives protection" - not sure about that one. regards c0ntex |
Re: Norton Ghost 9.0
Chas_G wrote:
> I've received an email from Symantec advertising 'Norton Ghost 9.0'. > Symantec states that it is an advanced program which offers a backup > to the computer and gives protection. It sounds interesting but costs > £29 and I wonder if it is worth using Norton Ghost. > > Does anyone have any experience of this program? I would value any > comments. > > Many thanks. > Regards, > > Chas_G Ghost, like other disk imaging programs, is indispensable, if you want to make sure you have a reliable disaster recovery option. I personally use Acronis True Image. Regardless of which product you choose, a disk imaging program is worth every pence you pay for it. Open your check book and buy it. |
Re: Norton Ghost 9.0
Ghost is wonderful.
We use it for deployment. Build one image and every PC you/ve bought only takes a few minutes to hotload. When the PC crashes, it takes only a few minutes to restore. We use it in the test grop, because for some reason, I can't understand why, the software releases we do just seem to crash.....With ghost, the previous test image can be recreated in a few minutes so the crash can be easily duplicated and investigated. Sometimes we get evaluation software with timeouts, and it takes longer than the timeout to do the testing. Using Ghost, we just restore the image then reload the test software. It's easier than calling the company and trying to get a time extension. We use it on NTFS and FAT. Rock On Thu, 19 May 2005 12:10:02 +0100, Chas_G <chasg@DELETE_THIS.elmstead.freeserve.co.uk> wrote: >I've received an email from Symantec advertising 'Norton Ghost 9.0'. >Symantec states that it is an advanced program which offers a backup >to the computer and gives protection. It sounds interesting but costs >£29 and I wonder if it is worth using Norton Ghost. > >Does anyone have any experience of this program? I would value any >comments. > >Many thanks. >Regards, > >Chas_G |
Re: Norton Ghost 9.0
On Thu, 19 May 2005 12:10:02 +0100, Chas_G
<chasg@DELETE_THIS.elmstead.freeserve.co.uk> wrote: >I've received an email from Symantec advertising 'Norton Ghost 9.0'. >Symantec states that it is an advanced program which offers a backup >to the computer and gives protection. It sounds interesting but costs >£29 and I wonder if it is worth using Norton Ghost. > >Does anyone have any experience of this program? I would value any >comments. > I've used an earlier version of Ghost for many years now - it's practically indispensable as a backup tool. As regards protection, it only does so by allowing you to create storable archives of your drives/partitions, as well as being able to copy entire disks or partitions on the fly. As an aside, if you were thinking about upgrading your machine, many motherboard manufacturers bundle Ghost as a freebie..so you could consider it as £30 off the price of a new motherboard.... Regards, -- Stephen Howard - Woodwind repairs & period restorations www.shwoodwind.co.uk Emails to: showard{whoisat}shwoodwind{dot}co{dot}uk |
Re: Norton Ghost 9.0
Chas_G <chasg@DELETE_THIS.elmstead.freeserve.co.uk> wrote in
news:40to8114mquc5fcc9jm5j8bfnj3dibdo2v@4ax.com: > I've received an email from Symantec advertising 'Norton Ghost 9.0'. > Symantec states that it is an advanced program which offers a backup > to the computer and gives protection. It sounds interesting but costs > £29 and I wonder if it is worth using Norton Ghost. > > Does anyone have any experience of this program? I would value any > comments. > > Many thanks. > Regards, > > Chas_G For convenience, I prefer the Acronis product. However, for fine-grained control (especially from the command line version) nothing beats Norton Ghost. I haven't used Ghost 9 - as near as I can tell it's an attempt to catch up with some of the convenience features of Acronis (e.g., live backup while working, mounting of a backup image as a virtual drive, etc.). However, it appears to suffer somewhat from the classic Symantec problem: bloat. Ghost 8.2 from diskettes (remember those?) with lots of switches is what I use to back up encrypted OTFE HDs (switches for MBR preservation, etc.) Regards, |
Re: Norton Ghost 9.0
Rock wrote:
> We use it in the test grop, because for some reason, I can't > understand why, the software releases we do just seem to > crash.....With ghost, the previous test image can be recreated in a > few minutes so the crash can be easily duplicated and investigated. > > Sometimes we get evaluation software with timeouts, and it takes > longer than the timeout to do the testing. Using Ghost, we just > restore the image then reload the test software. It's easier than > calling the company and trying to get a time extension. > > We use it on NTFS and FAT. > > Rock Rock, For development work with applications Instead of ghost I recommend for test purposes, a package called VMware. You can recover from a system crash by closing the VM. To restore the system to virgin takes only seconds. To create a group of virgins on the same machine to emulate multiple network functionalities is a breeze and runs all MS OS packages and Linux very well. You can do both NTFS disks or fat disks either in RAM or on drives attached to the system. If you never have looked at this as an alternative to ghost you should for development, it is so sweet to test apps with various common application and configuration variances looking for conflicts. It has the added advantage of being to keep multiple point in time builds that can be examined interactively at the same time on the same machine. I believe they still have 30 day eval packages. It was the best $200 software package I have ever bought. If you are writing drivers or other low level type apps then it probably is not a great option, but most everything else..it rocks. It is nice to be able to build against all of the various MS OS packages at the same time on the same machine. While the more memory the system has increase the number of simultaneous VMs you can run, it is amazing what you can run in as little as 512mb ram on at 2GHZ. As with everything more is always better but it is nice to keep your prog machine up while running prog build in separate vm dynamically. I can't address their customer support, I have never used them. I have got to the point where almost everything I do is inside a custom VM designed for the task at hand, even the routine. Winged |
Re: Norton Ghost 9.0
Many thanks to all those who kindly responded. Much appreciated!
Regards, Chas_G |
Re: Norton Ghost 9.0
Yeah, Winged, we evaluated VMWare, but mostly they are too
hardware-limited. I mean, only recently did they decide to support USB, and 1394 isn't on the horizon yet. They have a problem with any DMA host controller, they need special stuff to make sure the target of the DMA goes to the right VM. I dunno if they support sata yet, I doubt it. Their support of Serial is really poor. Ah yes, but who uses serial anymore? Winbag, that's who. Their support of GART is pretty poor. I don't think there's any video card that's fully supported. We never tried soft-ice on vmware. But I suspect it has problems. I'd stick to VMWare for it's intended application: production servers. Rock On Thu, 19 May 2005 21:52:39 -0500, Winged <Winged@nofollow.com> wrote: >Rock wrote: > >> We use it in the test grop, because for some reason, I can't >> understand why, the software releases we do just seem to >> crash.....With ghost, the previous test image can be recreated in a >> few minutes so the crash can be easily duplicated and investigated. >> >> Sometimes we get evaluation software with timeouts, and it takes >> longer than the timeout to do the testing. Using Ghost, we just >> restore the image then reload the test software. It's easier than >> calling the company and trying to get a time extension. >> >> We use it on NTFS and FAT. >> >> Rock >Rock, >For development work with applications Instead of ghost I recommend for >test purposes, a package called VMware. You can recover from a system >crash by closing the VM. To restore the system to virgin takes only >seconds. To create a group of virgins on the same machine to emulate >multiple network functionalities is a breeze and runs all MS OS packages >and Linux very well. You can do both NTFS disks or fat disks either in >RAM or on drives attached to the system. If you never have looked at >this as an alternative to ghost you should for development, it is so >sweet to test apps with various common application and configuration >variances looking for conflicts. It has the added advantage of being to >keep multiple point in time builds that can be examined interactively at >the same time on the same machine. I believe they still have 30 day >eval packages. It was the best $200 software package I have ever bought. > >If you are writing drivers or other low level type apps then it probably >is not a great option, but most everything else..it rocks. > >It is nice to be able to build against all of the various MS OS packages >at the same time on the same machine. While the more memory the system >has increase the number of simultaneous VMs you can run, it is amazing >what you can run in as little as 512mb ram on at 2GHZ. As with >everything more is always better but it is nice to keep your prog >machine up while running prog build in separate vm dynamically. I can't >address their customer support, I have never used them. > >I have got to the point where almost everything I do is inside a custom >VM designed for the task at hand, even the routine. > >Winged |
Re: Norton Ghost 9.0
In article <Xns965B6510955D0abcxyzcom@127.0.0.1>, abc@xyz.com says...
> Chas_G <chasg@DELETE_THIS.elmstead.freeserve.co.uk> wrote in > news:40to8114mquc5fcc9jm5j8bfnj3dibdo2v@4ax.com: > > > I've received an email from Symantec advertising 'Norton Ghost 9.0'. > > Symantec states that it is an advanced program which offers a backup > > to the computer and gives protection. It sounds interesting but costs > > £29 and I wonder if it is worth using Norton Ghost. > > > > Does anyone have any experience of this program? I would value any > > comments. > > > > Many thanks. > > Regards, > > > > Chas_G > > > For convenience, I prefer the Acronis product. However, for fine-grained > control (especially from the command line version) nothing beats Norton > Ghost. > > I haven't used Ghost 9 - as near as I can tell it's an attempt to catch up > with some of the convenience features of Acronis (e.g., live backup while > working, mounting of a backup image as a virtual drive, etc.). However, it > appears to suffer somewhat from the classic Symantec problem: bloat. > > Ghost 8.2 from diskettes (remember those?) with lots of switches is what I > use to back up encrypted OTFE HDs (switches for MBR preservation, etc.) > > Regards, > > > > > I used an older version of Ghost to move to another hard drive but found it intolerable as a backup. I used Dantz Retrospect Pro instead. Then I wanted to have full disk images and bought Ghost 9. To my surprise, because I'm not too fond of symantec anymore, Ghost 9 is an excellent program. You can clone a disk. You can also create a drive image and then Ghost will divide that image into small enough parts to enable you to burn it to DVDs, or even CDs, along with a burn to an external hard drive. It is also very easy (and even user friendly), to restore a particular file or folder. Louise |
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