> > Someone on the list knows of a free resizing tool, I'm sure.
This has gotten so complicated. Your original plan, which uses tools you
already have on hand, sounded fine. Or this slight variation:
1) Use Ghost to make an image of your C: partition.
2) Remove all partitions.
3) Use Ghost to restore the image, specifying a smaller partion size. (Ghost
will create the partition.)
4) Boot the drive and use Disk Management to create your D: partition.
But how about backing up a minute? (Pun intended.) Do you really need to do
this at all?
If you're using TrueImage to back up your C: drive, why do you need a
separate D: drive and a different backup program? TrueImage can do
incremental backups and can recover individual files and folders. Does
SyncBack give you something that TrueImage doesn't? (I'm not familiar with
it.)
It seems to me that leaving everything on the C: drive and using TrueImage
regularly would give you good backup protection and make things much
simpler.
-Mike
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Received on Sat Mar 4 12:06:01 2006
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