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clônage... j'ai besoin de comprendre... et de trouver une solution à mon besoin

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Si j'ai bien compris, faire un clône consiste à faire une copie du disque de démarrage sur un autre disque situé dans l'ordinateur.

Moi je cherche à avoir un clône externe à la machine, depuis lequel je puisse booter l'ordinateur. Après, depuis ce clône externe, je cherche à pouvoir l'installer sur un nouveau disque dur situé dans la même machine.

En effet, je ne dispose pas d'un disque dur interne libre pour conserver en interne le clône.

De plus, comme sécurité il y a mieux.

Le clône, j'en ai besoin comme sécurité. Pas comme mise à niveau vers un disque de plus grande capacité ou vitesse.

Acronis, offre-t-il cela ? comment ? quelle version  d'acronis ?

 

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Mary wrote:

If I understood correctly, making a clone consists of making a copy of the boot disk on another disk located in the computer.

I am trying to have an external clone to the machine, from which I can boot the computer. Afterwards, from this external clone, I try to be able to install it on a new hard drive located in the same machine.

Indeed, I do not have a free internal hard drive to keep the clone internally.

In addition, there is better security.

The clone, I need it for security. Not as an upgrade to a higher capacity or faster drive.

Acronis, does it offer this? How? 'Or' What ? which version of acronis?

Mary, as stated in response to your other new topics about cloning, Microsoft do not allow the Windows OS to be booted from an external disk drive.  The only exception was if you purchased their Windows Enterprise edition and then used their Windows 2 Go feature.

See webpage: Windows OS on external hard drive

There are some third-party software vendors who claim to offer to make an external Windows drive bootable but when I tried this recently it was painfully slow, where this was on an Intel i7 gaming PC with 32GB RAM and running from a USB 3.0 external drive.

The application I tried was Hasleo WinToUsb which has to be used to create the bootable USB drive (not using Acronis Clone).

See also AOMEI Windows To Go Creator which offers an alternative application.

Acronis do not offer any tools / features to do this type of OS clone / migration.

Steve, as I understand it the ability to create a bootable USB drive is no longer available with current build of Windows 10.

Ian

Ian, I have never had an Enterprise edition of Windows that offered the Windows 2 Go option but have a recollection of others reporting that this was no longer being offered?