Strategy for dual boot.
I installed True Image with Plus Pack on a Windows XP 32-bit SP3 Professional machine that currently has one disk divided into two partitions (system and data). I am going to add a second 2 TB disk and install Windows 7 64-bit OS. I have done this before and simply let Windows 7 create the dual boot menu since it will see that XP is installed on another disk.
I take it I should avoid using the Acronis Startup Recovery Manager? What are the advantages to using the Recovery Manager? If you create the Rescue Media, won't that give you everything you need to do a system restore? What about recovering a corrupt MBR? Will the Rescue media do that, or do you still need to create the Win XP rescue diskette? (which will be tricky since I don't own a floppy drive anymore).
Thanks,
Sean
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Sean Stockburger wrote:I installed True Image with Plus Pack on a Windows XP 32-bit SP3 Professional machine that currently has one disk divided into two partitions (system and data). I am going to add a second 2 TB disk and install Windows 7 64-bit OS. I have done this before and simply let Windows 7 create the dual boot menu since it will see that XP is installed on another disk.
I take it I should avoid using the Acronis Startup Recovery Manager?
Yes.
What are the advantages to using the Recovery Manager?
Maybe some convenience. But if your disk dies, the ASRM won't work.
If you create the Rescue Media, won't that give you everything you need to do a system restore?
Yes provided you have tested your rescue media. You have booted your comptuer on it and you have recovered a couple of files from your backup
What about recovering a corrupt MBR? Will the Rescue media do that, or do you still need to create the Win XP rescue diskette? (which will be tricky since I don't own a floppy drive anymore).
The Rescue Media offers you the option to restore what Acronis calls the MBR+Track0. Restoring this component doesn't restore the MBR entirely: the partition table is not touched. See post #7 here http://forum.acronis.com/forum/17793#.
If you install Win7, you will be able to switch to the Window7 boot manager and use the Win7 installation DVD to fix/repair your MBR and boot records.
Thanks,
Sean
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