Brian --- Have not yet tried it on the Toshiba C855-S5347. Also not quite sure if we are in UEFI or Legacy mode. Tried the CD on my Dell 8200 and it boots fine, but it will not see my Logitech Wireless USB Mouse or the Dell USB Keyboard Also for some reason, I did not get a notification from your forum, even though I asked it to do so. Will recheck my profile. -- Found an option to notify of responses was not enabled.
Also attached a pix of the disk management screen from the Toshiba Win 10. Here is what your command returned: Microsoft Windows [Version 10.0.15063] (c) 2017 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. C: WINDOWS system32>reagentc /info Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE) and system reset configuration Information: Windows RE status: Enabled Windows RE location:? GLOBALROOT device harddisk0 partition5 Recovery WindowsRE Boot Configuration Data (BCD) identifier: 858f2308-3527-11e2-be71-20689dd6ae64 Recovery image location:?
Download Ghost 11.5 by Symantec. VETUSWARE.COM the biggest free abandonware downloads collection in the universe. You: guest Haec sententia nil esse. - Juliano Vetus, site founder. MS-DOS books on Amazon.com! — Mailman 3 hosting. •Ghost for DOS/classic Windows (set the program not to detect Windows and it'll work fine in '95,98,ME. Ghost.exe 11.5 for dos download. Ghost is a disk cloning and backup. EXE from folder Software Ghost.But this floppy image we are going to use is DOS and NOT Windows.
GLOBALROOT device harddisk0 partition6 Recovery Recovery image index: 1 Custom image location: Custom image index: 0 REAGENTC.EXE: Operation Successful. C: WINDOWS system32> Note: This laptop originally came with Windows 8 and was then upgraded to Windows 10 using the free upgrade provided by Microsoft.
Personally, I do not delete system partitions unless I absolutely need to and I am sure it will not mess something up. As to secure boot, I personally do not like it or think it is needed.
Same for UEFI unless your primary drive is like larger than 3GB. For my needs standard boot and NTFS are just fine. Bruce, Thanks. Your Recovery partition is the 819 MB one. Partition 1 is redundant. If you ever need extra space for your OS partition you could delete Partition 6 and add that space to the OS partition. But have the system imaged just in case you make a mistake.
Which imaging software will you use for this UEFI system? You have a GPT disk, not a MBR disk. Your OS is installed in UEFI mode. It boots in UEFI mode whether Secure Boot is on or off. If by standard boot you mean MBR, you don't have it. Secure Boot prevents unauthorized boot code from running.
For example, some of the recent Ransomware malware. IFL instructions for Simple Operations Mode Download and unzip the Trial file double click makedisk.exe Simple - Allow program to control most options I accept Choose your UFD or Optical drive (drive letters) Boot UFD or CD Backup this computer to an alternative drive Choose the Source drive Choose the Target drive Choose the partition on the Target drive Start For the second and subsequent backups Boot UFD or CD Backup this computer to an alternative drive Choose the Source drive Start It doesn't get any easier than Simple Operations Mode. I've been using Ghost in one version or another to backup and/or clone hard drives since 1997. Today, have Ghost 11.5 (DOS Version) on both CD's and Flash Drives. I use it to back up everything, from XP to Win-10 Pro/64. It doesn't seem to care what the OS is.
My software guru says he uses it to back up his Linux Server. Sometimes booting into Ghost from a Flash Drive works better than booting from a CD, and vise versa. So I keep both media handy. I never cease to be amazed at how old things work better than newer things. Backup programs included. Cheers Mates. It's nice to see that some folks still use Ghost. Business knowledge for it in investment banking pdf free download full.
That would be good if OldCasper can tell us if Ghost 11.5 will work with the Windows 10 Creators update and UEFI type BIOS. Just because it creates an image, does not mean you can restore it. The UEFI BIOS might stop you. But I suppose you could always boot into the BIOS and change it to Legacy to do the image restoral and then change it back after it works.