Fri Oct 19, 2007 3:31PM EDT
See Comments (13)
Say you're upgrading to a new hard disk. How do you make an identical copy of your hard drive? You can't just drag and drop files in Windows to the new drive, alas. You have to make a bit-for-bit copy of your drive, including all the hidden files, files in use, and other junk that doesn't show up in Windows Explorer.
Power users have long relied on Symantec's Norton Ghost to make bit-for-bit copies, or clones, of their hard drives. But at $70 a copy, that can be a little pricey for something many people may use only once. (In fairness to Ghost, the software does include lots of additional features that make it suitable for general backup use too.)
You know what I'm going to say next: How about a free alternative? Enter Clonezilla, an open source cloning application that works well and... hey, did I mention it's free?
As with Ghost, Clonezilla isn't exactly for computer novices. You burn the program to a bootable CD, and DOS-like prompts guide you through the cloning process. The amount of information displayed can be daunting, but most of it can be ignored. To copy a disk, just select the disk-to-disk option at the menu, and let it do its thing.
I gave it a shot using two 250GB drives (with the source drive having about 100GB of data on it), and the job was done in about 20 minutes. When finished, I had a perfect copy of my original hard drive that I could have subbed in for the original. In my case, I just saved it as a handy "just in case" backup. Clonezilla works with SATA or IDE drives and even supports USB drives. Give it a spin next time you have a big drive copying job to do.
LINK: Clonezilla
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
The instructions were a bit confusing and complicated for me. Step by step instructions on how to download and install are in order.
Bad, bad, bad, bad, bad. What a bad choice to recommend to the Yahoo demographic such an incredibly obtuse program with almost incomprehesible instructions. My eyes glazed somewhere around "Choice 2: Create you own recovery CD" by "Using a DRBL/Clonezilla server or booting Clonezilla Live (1.0.3-18 or later) into sheck mode". WHAT? This is nuts. Free? How many readers will ruin their drives trying this crap? You get what you pay for Chris. Anyone who balks over paying $70 (or less)for Norton Ghost (or similar), and letting the program run overnight, deserves to lose all their data. Sheesh! What a maroon!
My thanks to William Harper for the "head's up" re the incomprehensible instructions. I have no idea what they mean either & I don't know why they bother.
Excellent software, but you must understand simple directions. Unless you are in charge of a ntwk use the live cd, try cdburnerxp (free) to burn iso. Do some research, learn a bit and save some $. Education is priceless. Running the live cd does not effect your hdd. Google info and your done. http://www.clonezilla.org/forum/ my fav link is gparted&clonezilla on 1 live cd as burnable iso file. http://download.tuxfamily.org/gpartedclonz/gparted-clonezilla-2.3.iso use torrent server for slow download connections Michael
hi guys i have symantec ghost8.3 for free if anyone need it pls ctc me on maheshgarade@rediff.com. alos the instruction are fee. IT REALLY WORKS.
The problem with copying in the plain old way to the last commenter is that you can get problems occurring when windows refuses to copy a file that is 'in use' and so the copy process fails!!!
This is great. I want to clone my 250gb HDD onto a 1TB HDD. Will post about how this all works out for me.
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6 Posted by hyco80 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:21PM EDT Report Abuse
@visspacem- you're not making a "clone" backup (a byte-by-byte exact copy) of your data when you "one finger drag and click"... good luck booting back into OS X with a new drive using that "method"... The concept of drive cloning may be beyond you. Ignorant can be taught but stupid is always stupid.