Backing up - Windows or entire drive? Advice needed
I've just installed ATI 2016 and I'm not sure how best to use it for a local (not cloud) backup.
My W7 computer is newly built, and consists of a 240GB SSD 'C' drive and several SATA storage drives, one of which I'll use for the backup location.
The documents, data and files on the storage drives can be easily replaced. But now I've got Windows the way I want it, I don't want to have to configure it again. So I'd be happy to back up ONLY the Windows folder.
So my questions are:
1) Any fishooks or problems in backing up (and restoring via DVD) just Windows?
2) If this sounds like a good idea, I have to say that I found it difficult just now to even locate the Windows folder. Sounds dumb, I know, but I guess I was expecting ATI to have a fairly prominent and obvious path to this single-folder backup method.
Advice please.


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Thanks, Bobbo. What you say makes sense.
Actually, I'm using MBR, not UEFI\GPT so AFAIK I don't have any hidden partitions.
Still, it's probably cleverer and cleaner to back up the entire 240GB SSD.
I might even have another go at creating a USB boot disk for the recovery. I tried this several times when I was building the system and never got it to work. There was a problem that seemed to originate with the BIOS (UEFI) on my Asus170M-Plus motherboard. Something to do with my MBR setting, I think.
Maybe a DVD boot would be easiest.
Cheers :-)
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You might also consider creating a one time backup of your Win 7 OS installation full disk of your as you say "configured just how you like it" installation. I do this as a way of preseving a fresh clean configured OS installation just in case I need to restore to an orignal state at some point. This has saved me countless hours in the past with needing a clean installation.
A word of caution with this though, if you decide to do this make certain that you select the Options button on the Backup screen of the GUI then select the Exclusions tab and remove all exclusions except Recycle bin, Hiderfil, PageFile, and SwapFile. This will insure that all of the install is contained in the resulting backup image file created.
Another note is that once you have such a backup created run a validation check on it. After that check passes open Windows File Explorer and navigate to the backup file location. Double click on the file to open and surf around it a bit. If all of that works it is a safe bet that the image can be recovered.
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