I found out about the USB drive partitioning flaw when I made a 16gb USB flash into a Win7 installer by formatting it primary and copying install files into the root. I wanted other tools/apps on a separate partition but ran into that wall: explorer only sees one partition.
What I ended up doing is putting all the other apps on there, storing Win7 install files in a folder until I need to boot the stick when just spill them out into the root. Works perfectly.
Here is what we do for backups on seven computers here at home:
- use Windows 7 Backup Imaging on all but the XP which uses Acronis.
- format a primary partition of the size the imaging app says it wants, it autodetects it as a drive and stores it there, then copy it to an external drive folder named for that machine in case of HD failure.
Later if need to reimage place the image into the root of the external and the booted installer or repair CD autodetects it there. Or use the one it autodetects on it's own HD or a secondary drive.
You can also send, store and reimage them over the network once you get the hang of it.
Hmm. You lost me a little bit.
But what I did was just make it 1 large parition again & make a folder for my media & a folder for my OS backup.
I'm re-backing up with 2nd copy now to the new file destination.
So what are you suggestions with the Acronis backup so that it autostarts in the future if I ever need it to? I guess I'm just confused?