System Image Backup Strategies/Thoughts

I guess that like all other electronic equipment it gradually degrades until something goes wrong with the hardware. I would have thought that a mechanical component such as the disk drive would go first.

Maybe. My own experience has been MB's failing. Two.
And unless you replace it with an identical MB, your normal images are worth dirt.
By the time they fail, you're almost certainly due for an upgrade, yours can't be found new any more, and you might not want to go on eBay to buy an identical one. That's why I do the occasional sysprepped image.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
QuadCore Intel Core i7 920, 2666 MHz (20 x 133)
Motherboard
Asus P6T
Memory
6134 MB (DDR3-1333 DDR3 SDRAM)
Graphics Card(s)
(2 - SLI) NVIDIA GeForce GTS 250 (1024 MB)
Sound Card
Onboard Realtek ALC888/1200 @ Intel 82801JB IC
Monitor(s) Displays
HDMII
Screen Resolution
1280 x 800
Hard Drives
Crucial M4 (64 GB SSD)
WD Caviar Blacks
WD5001AALS-00J7B1 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD5001AALS-00J7B1 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD5001AALS-00L3B2 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD Elements USB External (250 GB)
PSU
Corsair 550
Case
iStarUSA S-10000BL Black
I've never done a sysprepped image. Perhaps I should.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Hewlett-Packard/G62-107SA Notebook
OS
Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit Service Pack 1
CPU
Intel(R) Core(TM) i3 CPU M 330 @ 2.13GHz
Motherboard
Hewlett-Packard 1425
Memory
8 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Intel(R) HD Graphics
Sound Card
Realtek High Definition Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Builtin
Screen Resolution
1366 x 768 x 32 bits (4294967296 colors) @ 60 Hz
Hard Drives
250 GB SATA Hard Disk Drive 7200 rpm
2TB Seagate GoFlex USB 2 Drive
1TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive
1.5TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive (Samsung)
2TB WD MyBook Live NAS.
Mouse
Logitech Anywhere MX
Internet Speed
152 Mbs download 10 Mbs upload
Antivirus
Norton 360
Browser
Chrome
Me neither, I wouldn't even know how to! :roflmao:
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Win 7 Ultimate, Win 8.1 Pro, Linux Mint 19 Cinnamon (All 64-Bit)
CPU
Intel i5 4690K
Motherboard
Gigabyte Z97X-UD3H
Memory
Corsair Vengeance LP 32GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
MSI GTX 1060 GAMING X 6GB
Sound Card
Onboard
Hard Drives
Samsung 850 EVO 250GB SSD (x2)
Samsung 860 EVO 1TB SSD (x2)
Crucial MX300 525GB SSD
WD Blue 2TB 5400rpm Intellipark Disabled (x2)
PSU
Corsair HX750i
Case
Phanteks Enthoo Pro
Cooling
CM Hyper 212 EVO on CPU, Noctua Redux NF-P14S 1500rpm (x6)
Keyboard
Corsair K70 RGB LUX
Mouse
Corsair Sabre RGB
Antivirus
Avast Free, MalwareBytes, SAS & CryptoPrevent
Browser
Chrome
Other Info
StarTech PEXESAT322I 2 Port PCI-E SATA Card
ASUS PCE-AC56 Dual-band AC1300 Wireless Card
Akasa FC.Six Manual Fan Controller
And a Partridge in a Pear Tree!

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Hewlett-Packard/G62-107SA Notebook
OS
Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit Service Pack 1
CPU
Intel(R) Core(TM) i3 CPU M 330 @ 2.13GHz
Motherboard
Hewlett-Packard 1425
Memory
8 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Intel(R) HD Graphics
Sound Card
Realtek High Definition Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Builtin
Screen Resolution
1366 x 768 x 32 bits (4294967296 colors) @ 60 Hz
Hard Drives
250 GB SATA Hard Disk Drive 7200 rpm
2TB Seagate GoFlex USB 2 Drive
1TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive
1.5TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive (Samsung)
2TB WD MyBook Live NAS.
Mouse
Logitech Anywhere MX
Internet Speed
152 Mbs download 10 Mbs upload
Antivirus
Norton 360
Browser
Chrome
Thanks for that Kado, I'll take a proper look at that later. Doesn't seem too painful, I was expecting there to be a lot of commands involved.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Win 7 Ultimate, Win 8.1 Pro, Linux Mint 19 Cinnamon (All 64-Bit)
CPU
Intel i5 4690K
Motherboard
Gigabyte Z97X-UD3H
Memory
Corsair Vengeance LP 32GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
MSI GTX 1060 GAMING X 6GB
Sound Card
Onboard
Hard Drives
Samsung 850 EVO 250GB SSD (x2)
Samsung 860 EVO 1TB SSD (x2)
Crucial MX300 525GB SSD
WD Blue 2TB 5400rpm Intellipark Disabled (x2)
PSU
Corsair HX750i
Case
Phanteks Enthoo Pro
Cooling
CM Hyper 212 EVO on CPU, Noctua Redux NF-P14S 1500rpm (x6)
Keyboard
Corsair K70 RGB LUX
Mouse
Corsair Sabre RGB
Antivirus
Avast Free, MalwareBytes, SAS & CryptoPrevent
Browser
Chrome
Other Info
StarTech PEXESAT322I 2 Port PCI-E SATA Card
ASUS PCE-AC56 Dual-band AC1300 Wireless Card
Akasa FC.Six Manual Fan Controller
And a Partridge in a Pear Tree!

That's how I found this forum, and the process that I used.
Might be overkill to keep a system image that can be used on a different computer, but I REALLY HATE REINSTALLING.
I don't recommend or discourage making a sysprepped image. Just depends on what level of insurance you want. Since I always restore before making a new image, restoring is second nature, and it goes like this, all restores and imaging done cold from the Ghost recovery CD, similar to the Win 7 recovery CD:
1. Restore my last image and boot to Win 7.
2. Update what I want updated for the new Win 7 image.
3. Shut down and make new "normal" image.
4. Boot to Win 7 and run sysprep with shutdown option.
5. Make image of sysprepped Win 7.
6. Restore "normal" Win 7 image.

Steps 4, 5,and 6 are added costs for doing the sysprep. Since an image or restore takes about 4 minutes (~20gb) and I always make 2 images to different HD's, it costs me about 15-20 minutes total, counting booting and running sysprep. Sysprep runs in a minute or two on my PC, but I never timed it exactly.
There's a small learning curve, but it's all in the tutorial.
For example I had to turn off network services before running sysprep successfully.
And I had a second PC with different MB to test the sysprepped image.
I don't recommend it unless you're comfortable restoring your image, because you're stripping drivers from the Win 7 on your HD.
There are alternatives, like cloning your Win 7 to a different HD, then sysprepping
that drive and imaging it, etc, etc. I just keep it simple by using the method I outlined.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
QuadCore Intel Core i7 920, 2666 MHz (20 x 133)
Motherboard
Asus P6T
Memory
6134 MB (DDR3-1333 DDR3 SDRAM)
Graphics Card(s)
(2 - SLI) NVIDIA GeForce GTS 250 (1024 MB)
Sound Card
Onboard Realtek ALC888/1200 @ Intel 82801JB IC
Monitor(s) Displays
HDMII
Screen Resolution
1280 x 800
Hard Drives
Crucial M4 (64 GB SSD)
WD Caviar Blacks
WD5001AALS-00J7B1 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD5001AALS-00J7B1 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD5001AALS-00L3B2 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD Elements USB External (250 GB)
PSU
Corsair 550
Case
iStarUSA S-10000BL Black

That's how I found this forum, and the process that I used.
Might be overkill to keep a system image that can be used on a different computer, but I REALLY HATE REINSTALLING.
I don't recommend or discourage making a sysprepped image. Just depends on what level of insurance you want. Since I always restore before making a new image, restoring is second nature, and it goes like this, all restores and imaging done cold from the Ghost recovery CD, similar to the Win 7 recovery CD:
1. Restore my last image and boot to Win 7.
2. Update what I want updated for the new Win 7 image.
3. Shut down and make new "normal" image.
4. Boot to Win 7 and run sysprep with shutdown option.
5. Make image of sysprepped Win 7.
6. Restore "normal" Win 7 image.

Steps 4, 5,and 6 are added costs for doing the sysprep. Since an image or restore takes about 4 minutes (~20gb) and I always make 2 images to different HD's, it costs me about 15-20 minutes total, counting booting and running sysprep. Sysprep runs in a minute or two on my PC, but I never timed it exactly.
There's a small learning curve, but it's all in the tutorial.
For example I had to turn off network services before running sysprep successfully.
And I had a second PC with different MB to test the sysprepped image.
I don't recommend it unless you're comfortable restoring your image, because you're stripping drivers from the Win 7 on your HD.
There are alternatives, like cloning your Win 7 to a different HD, then sysprepping
that drive and imaging it, etc, etc. I just keep it simple by using the method I outlined.

How big are your Sysprepped images usually then Victor? I'm getting a bit low on space lately and going to have to add another external HDD soon. Worth it though.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom Build
OS
Win 7 Ultimate, Win 8.1 Pro, Linux Mint 19 Cinnamon (All 64-Bit)
CPU
Intel i5 4690K
Motherboard
Gigabyte Z97X-UD3H
Memory
Corsair Vengeance LP 32GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
MSI GTX 1060 GAMING X 6GB
Sound Card
Onboard
Hard Drives
Samsung 850 EVO 250GB SSD (x2)
Samsung 860 EVO 1TB SSD (x2)
Crucial MX300 525GB SSD
WD Blue 2TB 5400rpm Intellipark Disabled (x2)
PSU
Corsair HX750i
Case
Phanteks Enthoo Pro
Cooling
CM Hyper 212 EVO on CPU, Noctua Redux NF-P14S 1500rpm (x6)
Keyboard
Corsair K70 RGB LUX
Mouse
Corsair Sabre RGB
Antivirus
Avast Free, MalwareBytes, SAS & CryptoPrevent
Browser
Chrome
Other Info
StarTech PEXESAT322I 2 Port PCI-E SATA Card
ASUS PCE-AC56 Dual-band AC1300 Wireless Card
Akasa FC.Six Manual Fan Controller
And a Partridge in a Pear Tree!
The company I worked for before I retired had a comprehensive disaster recovery strategy which involved several teams and I was a member of one of them. One of the things we had to do was a complete recovery of our IT systems from bare metal once per year using an offsite facility. We had to assume that the head office which contained our IT systems had been destroyed in an accidental or terrorist related event.

I was in the chemical/refining manufacturing business and involved from time to time in a similar situation. We didn't have offsite facilities which we could use to restore plant control networks. Instead we had hot running spares of all critical equipment where we could test.

The control networks were always air-gapped from the standard business network for obvious reasons and I wasn't involved with that side. But I was well aware of the machinations they went through as well.

Guess that's part of why I'm always re-analyzing my own strategy.
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
The company I worked for before I retired had a comprehensive disaster recovery strategy which involved several teams and I was a member of one of them. One of the things we had to do was a complete recovery of our IT systems from bare metal once per year using an offsite facility. We had to assume that the head office which contained our IT systems had been destroyed in an accidental or terrorist related event.

I was in the chemical/refining manufacturing business and involved from time to time in a similar situation. We didn't have offsite facilities which we could use to restore plant control networks. Instead we had hot running spares of all critical equipment where we could test.

The control networks were always air-gapped from the standard business network for obvious reasons and I wasn't involved with that side. But I was well aware of the machinations they went through as well.

Guess that's part of why I'm always re-analyzing my own strategy.

It does tend to stick with you.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Hewlett-Packard/G62-107SA Notebook
OS
Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit Service Pack 1
CPU
Intel(R) Core(TM) i3 CPU M 330 @ 2.13GHz
Motherboard
Hewlett-Packard 1425
Memory
8 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Intel(R) HD Graphics
Sound Card
Realtek High Definition Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Builtin
Screen Resolution
1366 x 768 x 32 bits (4294967296 colors) @ 60 Hz
Hard Drives
250 GB SATA Hard Disk Drive 7200 rpm
2TB Seagate GoFlex USB 2 Drive
1TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive
1.5TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive (Samsung)
2TB WD MyBook Live NAS.
Mouse
Logitech Anywhere MX
Internet Speed
152 Mbs download 10 Mbs upload
Antivirus
Norton 360
Browser
Chrome
How big are your Sysprepped images usually then Victor? I'm getting a bit low on space lately and going to have to add another external HDD soon. Worth it though.

I can't tell, because I wasn't paying attention to size when I did it, but looking now at what I have the sysprepped image is about 2gb smaller than the closest image timewise. But I've deleted the "normal" images done close to that time, about 6 weeks ago. I have 5 "normal" images since then, so I was relatively busy with images.
I'm going to do another sysprepped image next time I restore, and I'll look for the actual size difference.
I expect it to be only some mb smaller, since it's only removing drivers. So that 2gb diff isn't right.
My images range from 17-21gb each, and I see I now have 14.
Only really need maybe 5, because only once have I used anything but the most recent.
But I always want to keep one a few months old - just in case there's a time bomb in there.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
QuadCore Intel Core i7 920, 2666 MHz (20 x 133)
Motherboard
Asus P6T
Memory
6134 MB (DDR3-1333 DDR3 SDRAM)
Graphics Card(s)
(2 - SLI) NVIDIA GeForce GTS 250 (1024 MB)
Sound Card
Onboard Realtek ALC888/1200 @ Intel 82801JB IC
Monitor(s) Displays
HDMII
Screen Resolution
1280 x 800
Hard Drives
Crucial M4 (64 GB SSD)
WD Caviar Blacks
WD5001AALS-00J7B1 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD5001AALS-00J7B1 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD5001AALS-00L3B2 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD Elements USB External (250 GB)
PSU
Corsair 550
Case
iStarUSA S-10000BL Black
The company I worked for before I retired had a comprehensive disaster recovery strategy which involved several teams and I was a member of one of them. One of the things we had to do was a complete recovery of our IT systems from bare metal once per year using an offsite facility. We had to assume that the head office which contained our IT systems had been destroyed in an accidental or terrorist related event.

I was in the chemical/refining manufacturing business and involved from time to time in a similar situation. We didn't have offsite facilities which we could use to restore plant control networks. Instead we had hot running spares of all critical equipment where we could test.

The control networks were always air-gapped from the standard business network for obvious reasons and I wasn't involved with that side. But I was well aware of the machinations they went through as well.

Guess that's part of why I'm always re-analyzing my own strategy.

It does tend to stick with you.

I try to forget, but that doesn't work. I was at the offsite operation twice, one a very long weekend. IME they never go smoothly, mostly because of different hardware. (Sysprep anyone?) This was all mainframe, and getting the OS and data management up always led to long delays. In the end though, even if all apps didn't get running properly, there was always enough up and running to call it a "success."
hehe.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
QuadCore Intel Core i7 920, 2666 MHz (20 x 133)
Motherboard
Asus P6T
Memory
6134 MB (DDR3-1333 DDR3 SDRAM)
Graphics Card(s)
(2 - SLI) NVIDIA GeForce GTS 250 (1024 MB)
Sound Card
Onboard Realtek ALC888/1200 @ Intel 82801JB IC
Monitor(s) Displays
HDMII
Screen Resolution
1280 x 800
Hard Drives
Crucial M4 (64 GB SSD)
WD Caviar Blacks
WD5001AALS-00J7B1 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD5001AALS-00J7B1 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD5001AALS-00L3B2 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD Elements USB External (250 GB)
PSU
Corsair 550
Case
iStarUSA S-10000BL Black
It does tend to stick with you.

I try to forget, but that doesn't work.

When you've seen how others have experienced data loss, and you already know how fragile the hardware and software is, it really becomes impossible to disregard.

In the end though, even if all apps didn't get running properly, there was always enough up and running to call it a "success."
hehe.

One would hope they know when to call it "quits". If they actually experience a disaster and they're willing to live with the extra work they know it'll take to do the complete recovery, I guess you have to leave it up to them to live with any consequences.

I think my problem is I strive for perfection, even though I know I could easily manage otherwise if disaster actually hit.

Very good thread! Many readers (including myself) can derive some benefit from it.
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
I was in the chemical/refining manufacturing business and involved from time to time in a similar situation. We didn't have offsite facilities which we could use to restore plant control networks. Instead we had hot running spares of all critical equipment where we could test.

The control networks were always air-gapped from the standard business network for obvious reasons and I wasn't involved with that side. But I was well aware of the machinations they went through as well.

Guess that's part of why I'm always re-analyzing my own strategy.

It does tend to stick with you.

I try to forget, but that doesn't work. I was at the offsite operation twice, one a very long weekend. IME they never go smoothly, mostly because of different hardware. (Sysprep anyone?) This was all mainframe, and getting the OS and data management up always led to long delays. In the end though, even if all apps didn't get running properly, there was always enough up and running to call it a "success."
hehe.

That's interesting. I never had that problem, probably because all our systems were hosted on IBM's VM hypervisor. The manager of the recovery facility said that VM users often had fewer problems than those who used IBM's native OS MVS or VSE.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Hewlett-Packard/G62-107SA Notebook
OS
Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit Service Pack 1
CPU
Intel(R) Core(TM) i3 CPU M 330 @ 2.13GHz
Motherboard
Hewlett-Packard 1425
Memory
8 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Intel(R) HD Graphics
Sound Card
Realtek High Definition Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Builtin
Screen Resolution
1366 x 768 x 32 bits (4294967296 colors) @ 60 Hz
Hard Drives
250 GB SATA Hard Disk Drive 7200 rpm
2TB Seagate GoFlex USB 2 Drive
1TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive
1.5TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive (Samsung)
2TB WD MyBook Live NAS.
Mouse
Logitech Anywhere MX
Internet Speed
152 Mbs download 10 Mbs upload
Antivirus
Norton 360
Browser
Chrome
That's interesting. I never had that problem, probably because all our systems were hosted on IBM's VM hypervisor. The manager of the recovery facility said that VM users often had fewer problems than those who used IBM's native OS MVS or VSE.

I was on the application end, and paid little attention to the IBM model or OS version after the 370, but I doubt the recoveries I participated in were VM sessions. More likely the problems were natural to such a massive task, because it was a very large company with many interfacing applications. I specifically remember unexpectedly being called into one (they normally only used staff, and I was a contractor) when essential VSAM files couldn't be loaded. It's cloudy now, but it may have been the define clusters were erroring. After some time I managed to load them with a workaround, but there was obviously a difference in the off-site OS VSAM parameters that didn't exist at the home office OS. It may or may not have related to the disk drives used off-site. Really not much different from some problems you see on this forum.
To F5ing, "knowing when to quit" is exactly right.
Large company disaster recovery exercises are very expensive, and take a toll on staff, subtracting a weekend from their lives. I saw one where some staff were still off-site on Monday, and that affects the work week business operations.
I do believe that those I mentioned can be called "successful" because what didn't work was identified, and a solution for the future found and locked in.
Realistically, those in charge of disaster recovery have no illusions about it, and give upper management a sober assessment of how long it will take to get the enterprise up and running again - barring what Murphy has to say about it.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
QuadCore Intel Core i7 920, 2666 MHz (20 x 133)
Motherboard
Asus P6T
Memory
6134 MB (DDR3-1333 DDR3 SDRAM)
Graphics Card(s)
(2 - SLI) NVIDIA GeForce GTS 250 (1024 MB)
Sound Card
Onboard Realtek ALC888/1200 @ Intel 82801JB IC
Monitor(s) Displays
HDMII
Screen Resolution
1280 x 800
Hard Drives
Crucial M4 (64 GB SSD)
WD Caviar Blacks
WD5001AALS-00J7B1 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD5001AALS-00J7B1 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD5001AALS-00L3B2 ATA Device (465 GB)
WD Elements USB External (250 GB)
PSU
Corsair 550
Case
iStarUSA S-10000BL Black
Hi,

I have another question - I am about to move my pictures to drive D, but I still want to have a shortcut to my pictures on my desktop. When I image my drive C using Macrium, will it pull in my pictures.....?

You understand that my objective here is not to pull my pictures in while imaging drive C.

Thanks,
BBDS
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home 64bit
I'm not sure about Macrium, but imaging/cloning apps typically will copy/image/clone only the data within a partition/disk. They will copy the shortcuts, links, etc. if they are in the partition/disk, but will not follow them to also copy the data they link to.

Sounds like you're really catching on, as that's pretty much the idea. You want access to the data for normal use regardless of where it's located, so you link it or add it to a library for ease of access.
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
I'm not sure about Macrium, but imaging/cloning apps typically will copy/image/clone only the data within a partition/disk. They will copy the shortcuts, links, etc. if they are in the partition/disk, but will not follow them to also copy the data they link to.

This is a good news.

Thanks,
BBDS
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home 64bit
You're welcome! Good luck with setting up your new strategy. You'll get the hang of it pretty quickly.
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
I'm not sure about Macrium, but imaging/cloning apps typically will copy/image/clone only the data within a partition/disk. They will copy the shortcuts, links, etc. if they are in the partition/disk, but will not follow them to also copy the data they link to.

Sounds like you're really catching on, as that's pretty much the idea. You want access to the data for normal use regardless of where it's located, so you link it or add it to a library for ease of access.

I agree with FSing. Macrium will not follow the link.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Hewlett-Packard/G62-107SA Notebook
OS
Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit Service Pack 1
CPU
Intel(R) Core(TM) i3 CPU M 330 @ 2.13GHz
Motherboard
Hewlett-Packard 1425
Memory
8 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Intel(R) HD Graphics
Sound Card
Realtek High Definition Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Builtin
Screen Resolution
1366 x 768 x 32 bits (4294967296 colors) @ 60 Hz
Hard Drives
250 GB SATA Hard Disk Drive 7200 rpm
2TB Seagate GoFlex USB 2 Drive
1TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive
1.5TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive (Samsung)
2TB WD MyBook Live NAS.
Mouse
Logitech Anywhere MX
Internet Speed
152 Mbs download 10 Mbs upload
Antivirus
Norton 360
Browser
Chrome
One more question, if this is not too much....

I created a repair/boot cd for my W7, but is there any easy way to do the same for XP....?

Thanks,
BBDS.
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home 64bit
Back
Top