Displaying 4 results from an estimated 4 matches for "ubcd4win".
2007 Nov 26
0
SOLVED: Re: Dual boot box: WinXP & CentOS 5: Impossible to restore WinXP?
...hod Ross explained last week, about doing it
from CentOS5, would be the fastest and easiest. For those with boxes
dedicated 100% to WinXP, I believe the Ultimate Boot CD for Windows,
which Phil mentioned (based on the BartPE Live CD) is the way to go. I
downloaded the 196.6 MB file from http://www.ubcd4win.com and I have
copied the contents of the Dell WinXP Restore CD to my HD. I like the
fact that they explain workarounds, for those using a Dell WinXP
Restore CD to make the UBCD4WIN CD. One of the mistakes I made, was
after I got the box in 2005. On other new systems, I've wiped the
drive and...
2007 Nov 19
5
Dual boot box: WinXP & CentOS 5: Impossible to restoreWinXP?
On Monday, 19 November 2007, Ross S. W. Walker rwalker at medallion.com wrote:
<snip>
> You can fix it all from CentOS.
Ross: In addition to coming up with another slick way to fix this box,
which I truly appreciate, you came up with the below:
>You need to run some kind of rootkit detection and cleaner on the
>system before it reboots or else it will just reinstall itself.
2007 Nov 19
1
Dual boot box: WinXP & CentOS 5: Impossible torestoreWinXP?
...centos.org>
Sent: Mon Nov 19 18:18:28 2007
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Dual boot box: WinXP & CentOS 5: Impossible torestoreWinXP?
On Monday, 19 November 2007, Philip.R.Schaffner at NASA.gov wrote:
<snip>
>A good toolkit for Windows is the Ultimate Boot CD for Windows at
>http://www.ubcd4win.com/
Phil:I found that Grisoft AVG (I use their free anti-virus program in
Windows) has a free tool:
AVG Anti-Rootkit Free
http://free.grisoft.com/doc/avg-anti-rootkit-free/lng/us/tpl/v5#details
and I downloaded that.
>It uses BartPE, discussed earlier, but adds a lot more tools, including
>...
2009 Oct 02
4
[Slightly OT] Data Preservation
HI All,
So I have 5 1U servers (running Windows) that have Ultra 320 SCSI
Drives in them.
The owner of these boxes wants the drives captured in their current
states to .iso or .cdr or something where if the need arises the data
can be viewed, used again, etc.
So what is the best approach? Boot from a Live CD, hook up a USB
external HD and do what? Can I create a .iso or .cdr (or some