Hi John,
> Hey, if it works, I'm not going to argue with it. (although this
> doesn't absolve Dantz of the responsibility to fix this) So
> question...how hard is it to restore the registry ? Does it work
> similarly to the Retrospect system?
I'm not sure I understand your question. I assume you
On 10/30/00 11:01 AM, "Ming-Li" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Or from the workstation itself. Both Retrospect for Win (5.11 and
> up) and MS Backup (the one bundled with Win2k) can backup the
> registry. You may set up the Win2k workstations to backup their own
> registries (and other System State
Hi John,
> So in other words...the only way to do a system restore on a
> Win2000 machine safely and reliably is from the windows server?
Or from the workstation itself. Both Retrospect for Win (5.11 and
up) and MS Backup (the one bundled with Win2k) can backup the
registry. You may set up the W
"retro-talk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, October 28, 2000 5:15 PM
Subject: Re: still looking for feedback on restoring registry
andrew kagan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi All: I posted a request for help yesterday but didn't see any activity
> from th
At 3:37 PM -0800 29/10/00, Robin Mayoff wrote:
>The best way to back up a Windows 2000
>computer is to use Retrospect for Windows.
I think that's an "OOPS".
--
Ken G i l l e t t
_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/_/
--
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To subscrib
The problem here is that I never had any single problem doing NT workstation
restores and Server restores with the Mac version of Retro. But I can't do
that with Win2000, although I really hope I'm misreading this. The 'restore
data files only' is barely acceptable when ou are talking about a user
Does Win2k have a way to backup it's own registry? If so, can it be
backed up to a specific location?
I don't have my Win2k box with me today (laptop), so I can't check.
I never bother anyway. If it died, I'd reinstall from scratch and
just recover the data files from tape. Much more reliab
So in other words...the only way to do a system restore on a Win2000 machine
safely and reliably is from the windows server?
On 10/29/00 6:37 PM, "Robin Mayoff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The Registry Backup Manager that is included with the Retrospect Client for
> Windows (for use with Retros
> Date: Sat, 28 Oct 2000 17:33:03 -0700
> To: retro-talk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subject: Re: still looking for feedback on restoring registry
>
> My understanding is (and some of you Win 2000 folks can correct me if I'm
> wrong) that the Windows 2000 registry is made up
Well good.
Just absolutely perfect.
So, now, to really back up my win2k drives, I have to ditch my very
functional Mac retro machine...and go buy a an win2k server. Because with
all the betas of win 2k, you guys never bothered to update the registry
backup tool. And since I just inherited *2* wi
Hi Eric,
> My understanding is (and some of you Win 2000 folks can correct me
> if I'm wrong) that the Windows 2000 registry is made up of more
> data files than the registry in Win NT.
That's correct. The list of file making up the registry has been
expanded quite a bit. And they're locked up p
My understanding is (and some of you Win 2000 folks can correct me if I'm
wrong) that the Windows 2000 registry is made up of more data files than the
registry in Win NT. Dantz's Registry Backup Manager is not designed to back
up the Win 2000 registry hives.
Retrospect 5.x _is_ able to back up (a
Wait...hold the phone...you mean that the registry backup tool is useless
under Win2K?
john
On 10/28/00 6:15 PM, "Eric Ullman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Retrospect 4.x is not able to backup the Windows 2000 registry; only
> Retrospect 5.x for Windows can. The Registry Backup Manager only fun
andrew kagan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi All: I posted a request for help yesterday but didn't see any activity
> from the list at all.
>
> Can anyone tell me how to restore the Windows 2000 system registry using a
> backup on retro 4.2 Mac?
Hi Andrew,
Retrospect 4.x is not able to backup
Saturday, October 28, 2000 2:41 PM
Subject: RE: still looking for feedback on restoring registry
> Is it a situation where you can boot using the 'last known good'
> configuration? If the system in question hasn't been rebooted in a
corrupted
> state, rebooting to 'las
Is it a situation where you can boot using the 'last known good'
configuration? If the system in question hasn't been rebooted in a corrupted
state, rebooting to 'last known good' can restore registry settings.
Regards, Dave Otto
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