Chicken and Egg
The Wassermans
dwass at optusnet.com.au
Tue Jan 1 23:59:58 GMT 2008
Well Greg, I connected the second HDD as you suggested.
The Second HDD has only Ubuntu on it - by the way. Which might be part of the problem?
Anyway, having connected it to my dvd cabling it, was recognised by the BIOS. Good so far. But . . .
there was no D: or E: drive in Explorer! However, under My Computer/devices it was listed right under the primary drive. But I couldn't find a way to access it.
The Second HDD has only Ubuntu on it - by the way. Which might be part of the problem?
I then loaded the HDD to another computer. Same thing!
I don't know what I am doing wrong.
Dave W
----- Original Message -----
From: Gregory Storer
To: The Wassermans
Sent: Tuesday, January 01, 2008 4:26 PM
Subject: Re: Chicken and Egg
Dave,
As always, check and double check your settings.
Remember you might have to change the hard drive jumper to slave,
depends on how your computer is set up.
When I did this, I too didn't want to loose any of my data. I copied
the really important stuff to another computer via my network -
documents and email files.
The risk is pretty small however, as XXClone is only copying the info
from your C drive to the D drive. Once done, remove your old C drive
and put it aside. There's the perfect back up! I have my old C drive
here and I cloned it some 4 weeks ok. No data is missing and its
working really well.
g.
On Tue, 2008-01-01 at 10:17 +1100, The Wassermans wrote:
> Great idea Greg!
>
> So I will simply clone from C: to D:. Will my PC recognise the HDD
> immediately or will I have to change the BIOS settings first?
>
> I'm a bit nervous about my data. There's not much risk is there?
>
> I'll try it . . . .
>
> Happy New Year to you.
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Gregory Storer
> To: The Wassermans
> Sent: Tuesday, January 01, 2008 9:29 AM
> Subject: Re: Chicken and Egg
>
>
> Hello Dave,
>
> I think I saw another email from you to the list, so perhaps
> you've
> solved this dilemma. If not, I would be using the cable for
> your DVD/CD
> player to be able to clone your hard drive - it should be
> possible.
>
> The computer I did this on was full, a cd player, dvd player,
> and two
> hard drives. I used the CD player cable, xxcloned the C drive
> to it and
> then swapped over the C drive with the newly cloned drive.
>
> Sorry for the delay in responding - its that time of year!
>
> g.
>
> On Sat, 2007-12-29 at 12:55 +1100, The Wassermans wrote:
> > Thanks for your very helpful response.
> >
> > I had a look at xxclone. Looks like a good product. I'm a
> bit
> > confused as to if I can clone to a networked machine?
> > You see, my primary machine is a Dell and only has space for
> one
> > drive. That may mean that I have to remove the drive and
> add it as an
> > e: drive to another machine and then add an F: drive as the
> target.
> > The idea would be to use the new F: drive back in the
> primary machine.
> > If you know what I mean?
> >
> > Can't find any info on this in Google.
> >
> > Dave W
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: Gregory Storer
> > To: ubuntu-au at lists.ubuntu.com
> > Sent: Saturday, December 29, 2007 11:09 AM
> > Subject: Re: Chicken and Egg
> > . . . . . . .
> >
> >
> > (I use XXClone to clone the XP partition onto the
> new HDD,
> > then used gparted to partition the HDD for XP and
> Linux.)
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