Disk Clone Dissappears - doesn't seem to run - just dissappears.
Hello,
I'm running Windows 8.1 RTM (legit) x64 with all the latest updates. All my hardware has the latest drivers.
I click on clone, select the drive I want to clone, then drive I want to restore to and proceed. The clone screen disappears and in task manager while it shows as running, it isn't anywhere to be seen including hidden icons down by my clock. The memory on acronis service and notify do not vary at all so i'm guessing it is idle. Nothing showing up in my event viewer either.
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boe dillard wrote:I think the issue was trueimagemonitor and common files common files\acronis\tibmounter\tibMounterMonitor.exe wasn't running. I tend to take any startup junk out of the registry as I only use acronis to clone once ever few months.
trueimagemonitor is a required component. If you remove it or disable it, you won't be able to do much.
If you don't want anything running, you could simply use the bootable Rescue Media. In fact, we advise that any cloning should be performed from the bootable Rescue Media anyway.
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boe,
If the only reason you use TI is to clone, you really do not need to have TI installed at all.
You can do your cloning from the CD and any new update for the CD can be downloaded direct from you account as the bootable iso file--which can be burnt directly as a new bootable TI bootable media.
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Note: It is always best using a bootmedia device such as DVD or USB Flash to boot especially when backing up SSD's to offline media. An SSD can be between 32GB and 1TB now but the average for a system backup is 128GB SSD which at most takes 20 minutes to backup depending on compression rate. You can save as much as an hour or more dependant on the amount of Ram and your processor speed. Also resident programs like ANtiVirus and Internet Security can slow down the process to a crawl sometimes because of packet interrupts.
Note also that from external media the disk doesn't know what OS is being used and doesn't care because it doesn't have to conform to its environmental variables. This is why a system like Linux is used most of the time for disk access. It can handle all the device variables from a single screen without having to worry about a GUI and other spurious addons. It handles disk operations like a second nature. So outside windows we know that using other formats of Operating can benefit the User. I am sure within Acronis Knowledge base there are numerous articles on the subject of Linux being the modern Dos.
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