Recenlty I've been helping a few people out, when there machines crash, by
pulling all there data of the drivers, documents, pictures, etc.. then I
have been burning the stuff out to give back to them...
A majority of the time the information is well over dvd capacity sizes and
I'm having to sit there and manually move stuff around to fit the dvd's to
not waste space on them..Like creating DVD1, dragging files into the folder,
DVD2, dragging files into the folder, etc
Here is the question, is there any software out there, that I can point to a
folder it will scan, build up a list, create the ISO and remember which ones
it has allocated to the ISO, then i can just burn out each ISO, job would be
done much quicker.
Thanks in advance.
Regards
Paul.
Easier for them to do external image backups ?
"Jim" <bojim...@googlemail.com> wrote in message
news:dknsq5dinsu4o1tls...@4ax.com...
with it you can point to a folder(s)
on the disk and create individual
images of the folders and files
that fit on a cd.
also, have the program make the
images into a folder on the hd and
call it something like "images xml"
then you can move those small
image files onto a dvd(s)
to restore the images from the
dvd(s), simply copy them back onto
the hard drive and extract the
data.
--
db·´¯`·...¸><)))º>
DatabaseBen, Retired Professional
- Systems Analyst
- Database Developer
- Accountancy
- Veteran of the Armed Forces
- Microsoft Partner
- @hotmail.com
~~~~~~~~~~"share the nirvana" - dbZen
>
>
"Kardon Coupé" <pref...@readon.newsgroups> wrote in message news:#niJg#dzKHA...@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl...
All I can see to do is back up a full drive and/or restore a full drive,
mind you I did download the freeware version, maybe that is why?
Regards
Paul.
"db" <databaseben at hotmail dot com> wrote in message
news:D6E59B52-CACB-4C16...@microsoft.com...
I went ahead and ran my
version and saw that the
program images the entire
drive.
for some reason I thought
it could image individual
folders.
there is however a program
called zip central.
it can zip folders and span
them over multiple disks.
you might want to look into
the above to help you out
with the predicament.
--
db·´¯`·...¸><)))º>
DatabaseBen, Retired Professional
- Systems Analyst
- Database Developer
- Accountancy
- Veteran of the Armed Forces
- Microsoft Partner
- @hotmail.com
~~~~~~~~~~"share the nirvana" - dbZen
>
>
"Kardon Coupé" <pref...@readon.newsgroups> wrote in message news:eM2HATfz...@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
hth
--
LVTravel <no...@none.com> is a convicted paedophilia from Johnstown, USA
and has been outed under Megan's Law. Please report him to your local
authorities if you see him near your kids.
I agree, zip and winrar will build archives of a specified size, like 4
gig. Splitting them as it goes. Then you just burn them as files to
dvds. I used to do that to floppies. It was really useful there.
> I agree, zip and winrar will build archives of a specified size, like 4
> gig. Splitting them as it goes. Then you just burn them as files to
> dvds. I used to do that to floppies. It was really useful there.
Although Zip and Winrar will do exactly what you say, the chances of files
being corrupted in the process is also very high. I have seen many times
that files that are split using Zip (mainly) failed to unzip when I wanted
them to. So caution is also required by way of testing these files before
deleting the source.
hth
Bull feces; Winzip is a very reliable program, as is the
legacy zip provided with win XP for compression of files. They
will meet or exceed the results of any other program on the
market. If you had trouble with spanned disks, those were your
problems, not the software's. You have to be one of the least
credible posters on the 'net, you know that?
I've never actually seen this happen.
As to maximum archive size, this is dependent on the Zip utility and the
disk format - FATx format does not support files larger than 4 gig.
> I don't think there is anything out there that can create an iso of a
> folder unless you meant "backup".
"IsoRecorder" will make a .iso of a folder.
After installation, simply right-click on a folder and select
"Create ISO Image File"
Freeware.
<http://isorecorder.alexfeinman.com/isorecorder.htm>
HTH,
John