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From: dos-man on 30 Mar 2008 21:28 Well, my win 98 PC has crashed again. When I boot it just keeps endlessly spinning the floppy drive. Tommorrow I have to bring the monitor down from the attic and hook it up. Then I have to format the C: drive and reinstall everything; all the drivers; all the software. Yikes. My computer does have 2 hard drives in it, but they are different models from different companies that hold different capacities. I'm thinking it's about time that I bought 2 hard drives that are the identical. Then when one goes down I can swap the drives and get back to a reasonable starting point. The question I have is how is this done? Can it be done without purchasing special drive-duplication software? Thanks, Dos-Man
From: Calab on 31 Mar 2008 19:51 "DaveW" <radiation(a)nuclear.org> wrote in message news:0oidnQkCh8ma_GzanZ2dnUVZ_uidnZ2d(a)comcast.com... | You either have to buy special backup software, or you can buy a PCI RAID | card and set up a RAID 1 array. This results in all data and programs being | simultaneously being written to both drives, resulting in a mirror image on | the two drives. Either way, there is no good FREE way to do what you want | to do. A raid array will do a good job of protecting you from hardware failure, but do nothing againts virii or poorly written software.
From: Calab on 30 Mar 2008 21:40 "dos-man" <ChairShot(a)mail.com> wrote in message news:d758757a-e37a-4139-93f9-281ab2259fd0(a)13g2000hsb.googlegroups.com... | Well, my win 98 PC has crashed again. When I boot it just keeps | endlessly spinning the floppy drive. Tommorrow I have to bring the | monitor down from the attic and hook it up. Then I have to format the | C: drive and reinstall everything; all the drivers; all the software. | Yikes. | | My computer does have 2 hard drives in it, but they are different | models from different companies that hold different capacities. I'm | thinking it's about time that I bought 2 hard drives that are the | identical. Then when one goes down I can swap the drives and get back | to a reasonable starting point. | | The question I have is how is this done? Can it be done without | purchasing special drive-duplication software? You might do better to use software like Acronis True Image to make a copy of the drive, once you have it set up the way you like. You can also do backups so you aren't starting from square one after a crash.
From: kony on 31 Mar 2008 01:10 On Sun, 30 Mar 2008 18:28:41 -0700 (PDT), dos-man <ChairShot(a)mail.com> wrote: >Well, my win 98 PC has crashed again. When I boot it just keeps >endlessly spinning the floppy drive. Tommorrow I have to bring the >monitor down from the attic and hook it up. Then I have to format the >C: drive and reinstall everything; all the drivers; all the software. >Yikes. > >My computer does have 2 hard drives in it, but they are different >models from different companies that hold different capacities. I'm >thinking it's about time that I bought 2 hard drives that are the >identical. Then when one goes down I can swap the drives and get back >to a reasonable starting point. > >The question I have is how is this done? Can it be done without >purchasing special drive-duplication software? > >Thanks, >Dos-Man You do not need identical drives to do this, only that the smaller of the two is large enough to hold all the data. However, if both of these drives are old then their being at end of expected lifespan already is reason enough to replace both. HDD manufacturers sometimes include software capable of doing this, especially something as simple as straight dupe of one FAT32 formatted drive to another. Seagate/Maxtor is one example (formerly two examples but now the same company) offering software with this capability. How much capacity do you need on this old system? Because of the small footprint taken up by Win98 and recent advances in flash memory density, it is conceivable you could run the system from an (SLC flash chip based instead of MLC type) compact flash card (choose CF3 or CF4 spec. type to get DMA support) and a compact flash IDE adapter (cheap from places like ebay or http://www.dealextreme.com . Today you can get a 4GB CF card for no more than the cost of a new hard drive and never again have a concern about mechanical failure. Some will be quick to point out that CF cards have write cycle limitations due to using flash memory, but you're not likely to exceed that limitation using an SLC based card any year soon, especially if the system has ample memory so there's very limited swapfile activity and ideally using a separate low cost 1GB CF card for the swapfile... that way even in worst case scenario if it were wore out over time you have merely to swap a different 2nd card in, without excessive wear to the card holding OS and documents.
From: GT on 1 Apr 2008 08:59 "DaveW" <radiation(a)nuclear.org> wrote in message news:0oidnQkCh8ma_GzanZ2dnUVZ_uidnZ2d(a)comcast.com... > You either have to buy special backup software, or you can buy a PCI RAID > card and set up a RAID 1 array. This results in all data and programs > being simultaneously being written to both drives, resulting in a mirror > image on the two drives. Either way, there is no good FREE way to do what > you want to do. What is this post related to? This does not follow up any other post and you have not included any text from the original?
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