Ghost 11 5 Exe Dos Windows

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  1. Ghost 11.5 Windows 10
  2. Symantec Ghost 11.5 Windows 10

Download Norton Ghost for Windows XP. Symantec ghost 11.5.exe download. Ghost exe 11.5 dos share files online. T ch h p norton ghost 11.5.1 v o c ng all windows. How to create a DOS system disk for Ghost. You want to create a floppy disk for starting the computer. Before you begin: If you are using drive translation software. How to create a DOS system disk for Ghost. You want to create a floppy disk for starting the computer. Before you begin: If you are using drive translation software.

Ghost 11.5 Windows 10

Success Getting Ghost 15 to Work on Windows 10:-) I've not seen anyone else have any success getting Norton Ghost 15 to work on Windows 10, so it seems I may be the first to manage this!!! How did I do this? I went into the Program Files Norton Ghost 15 folder and changed the properties of every Application file (.exe) I could find, such that they ran in Compatibility Mode for Windows 7. I changed every important looking application file this way, one at a time, rebooting each time until finally I was able to successfully enter my licence code. The files I changed were.

Hello Kent10. I've made backup images of Windows 10, both with Ghost 15 running on Windows 10 (before & after the Win 10 fix), and also using the Symantec Recovery Environment / Disk. Basically I've tested the Ghost program to destruction in every scenario I can think of and it seems to have worked every time. I think your images made before the fix should therefore be fine.

Symantec Ghost 11.5 Windows 10

The only issue with Ghost 15 & Windows 10 seems to be that it would have stopped working after the 30 day trail period. Images made during the trial period however are still valid. If you want to be especially cautious, then make another Ghost backup now using the fixed version (or Recovery Environment), and then you can always roll-back to that one if your previous image doesn't work. But it will work!!! Well drjwolfe that looked very promising.

It didn't work for me, however (Windows 10 Pro, 64 bit and Ghost 15). I couldn't find the file C: Program Files Norton Ghost Packages Agent NORTON1.exe. That's a DOS name, isn't it?

I nowhere found a norton.exe. What is the real filename? In C: Program Files(86) Norton Ghost Packages Agent I have, besides the.mst files: data1.cab, nghost15.msi, settings.ini and setup.exe. Of course I changed compatibility for the exe, but that was it. What am I missing here?

Don't worry about changing the 'NORTON1.exe' file. That won't affect the success of the process. Just change any the above files that you can find to run under Windows 7 compatibility mode. If you can't find it, then don't worry about it. The key file to change is C: Program Files Norton Ghost Agent VProSvc.exe. It is likely that you will get Norton Ghost 15 to work on Windows 10 by changing just that one file.

I only mentioned the others as I changed each of the them one by one, rebooting each time, and it was only when I got to the 'VProSvc.exe' file that Ghost 15 started to work as it should. I'm pretty sure it will work for you.

I've got Norton Ghost15 to work on win 10 I'm glad to say. First had numerous problems with 30 day trial and non acceptance of licence code.

Exe

Then ran Norton Removal Tool which was ok in my case since I had no other norton product (not sure what happens if more than one norton program on same computer). Reloaded program (different copy). Changed compatability to win 7 as recommended. This accepted licence code. To run programme went to Directory Norton Ghost Console VproConsole.exe. This now works fine.

Wow - wish I was as lucky as the rest of you. Been at it for days now. Like allard, I do not have a 'NORTON1.exe' file, either. In c: Program Files (x86) Norton Ghost Packages Agent NGHOST15.MSI' my product is identified as 'ProductSku = =20097485'. I tried all of the above (including running Norton Removal Tool after multiple uninstalls, reinstalls from the master CD, changing.every.EXE file to WIN 7 compatibility mode, etc.

One thing I noticed is that after changing everything to Win 7 compatibility mode, the system somehow remembers that setting - even if I run Norton Removal Tool after uninstalling Ghost v15. Must be stored in the registry (although I thought the Norton Removal Tool was supposed to clear the registry, too). Re: Bad Pool Header.

That sounds like it is a Windows 10 error, rather than a Ghost 15 error. Did you know, your original Ghost 15 Installation CD is actually a System Recovery Disk in itself. If you have that, you can use it without the need to make a new 'Custom Recovery Disk'. Assuming you have a valid G15 licence, you could also download the ISO for the G15 Recovery Disk (? Torrent), and then use someone else's computer to burn it.

Or burn it yourself, using a program such as 'ImgBurn' or 'Nero'. Just some suggestions!! You don't need any license or shady torrent sites to download the Ghost 15 SRD ISO file. It is right here. If you want to do Cold Backups without putting in the license code every time, then you need to make a Custom SRD. Since the Ghost 15 SRD runs on WinPE 2.1 that was released for Vista, It might be a good idea to make your own on the Windows 10 version of WinPE. I've done it with WinPE 3.1 (Windows 7 SP1) and WinPE 4 (Windows 8) like this.

I have not tried with the latest version of WinPE. Using Win PE 4 will you you USB 3 drivers. I was able to make the changes and everything 'appeared' to be working in Win 10. Backups made and verified. I tried to just recovery a single file and got a 'could not mount' the drive error. I had run Ghost twice.

One backup to a secondary HD and once to an external USB HD. I tried recovery from both images but when trying to recover the file and got the error, the drive letter shown was not the one used and I could not change the drive letter to the correct backup location.

I did not try a recovery from a cold boot to the Ghost disk. This was from inside the running program.

I have a Boot CD with a DOS version of Ghost in it (Ghost 11). I used to use it for booting a PC, running Ghost from there, and creating an image of a hard drive partition.

I did that under Win Vista, Win 7, Win 8. Now I have a PC with Windows 10 and no CD reader. My intention is to be able to backup and restore images, without having Ghost installed in my system. So I would need to boot from a pendrive, and run Ghost from the command prompt (as I did before with no problem). What I got so far: I booted from a pendrive formatted with Rufus and FreeDOS.

I copied the exes there. But:. When I execute ghost32.exe or ghost64.exe I get ' This command cannot run in DOS mode'. Using dir a:, etc. I do not find my hard drive. So, my questions are:.

I wonder if there is any other thing that I can do to be able to boot from USB and run my exes. I think I do not have installation disks for a Windows version, since my Win 10 came preinstalled. I have another Win 8 PC, which also came preinstalled.

And I have another Win Vista PC (I may not have the installation CDs). Even in this case, I wonder if ghost will find my hard disk partitions. Perhaps if I manage to make a bootable USB with some Win installation, that automatically allows the OS to recognize the HD partitions. EDIT - PS: I found. I tried the Hiren's way (as ). It successfully booted and opened Ghost in the Win 8 PC. But in the Win 10 PC it started booting and expanding programs to the ramdrive R:, where it hangs.

All sources that I found pointed to methods requiring the installation CDs (e.g., ). It is worth noting that I only need to be able to boot. Many pages warn that I would not be able to make a bootable USB out of a preinstalled Win PC, since the preinstalled Win is intended only for one PC. The argument would not apply, since I only want a bootable USB, not a boot+WinInstall USB.

This entry was posted on 26.08.2019.