Norton Ghost Boot Flash Disk Usb


I have a CD version (Manual and Automated) and a USB flash. Location: Scottsdale, Arizona, United States. Creating a Standard Ghost CD Boot Disk for cloning lab computers; Rating:2/10Creating a Standard Ghost CD Boot Disk for. GO to Start >All Programs >Symantec Ghost. Mar 31, 2015 - Fortunately, using Windows' built-in disk partitioning tool, it is possible to create your own bootable USB Norton Ghost recovery drive. Usb flash drive on white background. Isolated 3D image. Modern USB drives have enough storage to store a Ghost recovery disk. Credit: ISerg/iStock/Getty Images.
This tutorial will show you how to create a bootable Norton Ghost USB. Norton Ghost is a disk image creator tool useful for image back ups and multi-cloning. To accomplish this you would need 2 files: a. Format USB Tool. USBOOT Norton Ghost. Place the folders in a convenient location where you can easily access them (Desktop).
Once downloaded and extracted, open the Format USB Folder, then right click the Format USB Tool.exe and select “ Run as administrator“, it might prompt you to input an admin password. After running the Format USB tool select: the USB under device, Under file system select: FAT32, check format device, also check create a DOS start up disk and select from the browser the USB Norton Ghost Boot folder.
Archived from groups: comp.sys.laptops () Hi folks- I'm working on a laptop backup / disaster recovery scheme here. How can I get the bootable Ghost 9 recovery environment onto a USB memory key, making it bootable? My laptop (IBM T42P) can boot from USB. Vhdl Program For Parity Generator And Checker. Ghost 9.01 newbie here. My prior experience is all with Drive Image ending with DI 2002.
I would burn images to CD including bootable DOS with the DI2002 executables, so that each image disk was a self- contained recovery system (no other master recovery disk needed), or more recently, I put the DI2002 on a DOS-bootable USB key. Boot the USB key and BAM! I'm ready to recover from CD/DVD with the image.
I wasn't able to use DI2002 successfully to image my new laptop direct to DVD (assorted weird problems) so I bought our corporate standard Ghost. The main drawback I can see is that restoring the system drive requires booting the specific CD with recovery console on it. I don't want to have to carry it around, and there are problems when my recovery image media needs the same drive as the recovery console CD.
Since Ghost 9 recovery environment is built on NT, I can't just run executables from DOS. I need to get the whole recovery environment onto the USB key.
Any thoughts? Archived from groups: comp.sys.laptops () 'Giganews' wrote: >How can I get the bootable Ghost 9 recovery environment onto a >USB memory key, making it bootable? My laptop (IBM T42P) >can boot from USB. >>Ghost 9.01 newbie here. My prior experience is all with Drive >Image ending with DI 2002. I would burn images to CD including >bootable DOS with the DI2002 executables, so that each image >disk was a self-contained recovery system (no other master >recovery disk needed), or more recently, I put the DI2002 on a >DOS-bootable USB key.
>>Boot the USB key and BAM! I'm ready to recover from CD/DVD >with the image. >>I wasn't able to use DI2002 successfully to image my new laptop >direct to DVD (assorted weird problems) so I bought our corporate >standard Ghost. IMHO, recent versions of Ghost and DriveImage are heading in the wrong direction.
If you were happy with the DI2002 method, you probably should have switched to BootItNG instead of Ghost. IME, BootItNG is more stable anyway, and the method of creating bootable CD/DVD would probably look familiar to you from your experience with DI2002. I'm not sure if it can directly create bootable USB key (yet), but if not, tech support is very responsive and just might add it if you ask. (And they don't charge you for upgrades.). I recently bought an ASUS Eee PC 1000H.
Lacking an optical drive I wanted to be able to boot my Norton Ghost 9.0 recovery environment from a USB stick. I assume the recent flood of these ultra mobile PC's will cause a renewed interest in this topic. Here are the steps to make a bootable Ghost 9.0 Recovery USB stick or SD card (works just as well with the builtin SD card reader of the ASUS 1000H): Format the stick using the HP USB Disk Storage Format Tool (Google will easily locate this free utility for you).