This is simply not true. I have used Ghost32.exe and ghost.exe (formerlly ghostpe.exe) many times - The only problem I\'ve seen is it cannot read disks greater that 80 MB in size.
Question - Why would an OS be particular to a bit-wise, sector-by-sector copy, derrived soley from the physical disk geometry? Obviously, the OS wouldn\'t even be live, ergo, you\'d be booted from a 98 / ME floppy and running DOS anyway. I\'ve been doing the same thing on EMC and Clarrion Fiber DASD through ESCON and now TCP/IP channels for several years. It works wonderfully, checksums the results for absolute commitals, it\'s lightening fast ( like 10 minutes in PC land for 10 GB exact replica) - It is one or two levels under the OS, under the filesystem.
Please clarify (perhaps you\'re referring to the \"DataMover\" app (when c turns into d, change all references.. I wouldn\'t trust that either - even in a 16 bit and fat simplified environment.)
In regards to \"it only works if the machines are almost identical..\", then how does an Enterprise do a large install with such a boiler plate mechanism in place? I\'ve been at a few large shops, their PC architectures vary widely.
--swm
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