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Problem syncing folder with USB hard drive

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I am attempting to use the sync function to create a copy of my C drive data on a USB hard drive. My goal is not so much synchronization, as to get an easily readable copy of my C drive data onto my USB drive (so that I can plug that drive into any other computer and ready the data directly using windows explorer). In other words, and I trying to use the sync function to do the equivalent of a simple copy of an entire folder and its hierarchy.

Here are the steps I took:
- I start a New sync.
- For Specify a folder to synchronize, I select my source folder on my C drive (which is my C:\Users folder).
- For Select an object to sync with, I select Local folder.
- For Specify a folder to synchronize, I select a folder on the USB drive (which is attached to the same computer).
- I click sync now.

I get the following error message:
The selected destination folder contains another sync folder.

This is the first sync that I have set up, so no syncs have ever been set up (though I did previously create a backup to another computer on my home network). The folder on the USB drive is empty (except for a .sync folder and .desktop.ini file that was created when I set up the initial sync).

Given that I am creating my first sync, I don't see how the destination folder can contain another sync folder.

Does anyone have any guidance as to what I can do try to get this sync working, or maybe an easier way to accomplish my goal of just doing a simple file copy using Acronis True Image Home 2012?

Thanks!

0 Users found this helpful

If all you want is to have a copy of a data file directory, then for what you want, have you considered just using the copy command?

Also, consider making a backup of the desired files and then restoring to another drive as needed.

If you want to clone a system drive onto another disk, then note that, if this is your system drive, it won't work right on different hardware as the the different hardware will need to have different drivers loaded when the OS tires to boot up -- so both machines have to be identical.

Also, if this is Vista or W7, and you want to have the target disk be bootable, you can't just copy the C: partition; you need also the system reserved partition, which contains the windows boot manager.

Also, note that OEM versions of windows that come with PCs generally are not capable of being transferred to other PCs--those are windows rules.

The only value of using Sync would be if you want more-or-less constant updating of the files on both drives.