Symantec is a well-established software company with a wide range of products
and Norton Ghost, a disk-imaging product now up to version 10.0, has been part
of its range for some time.
Norton Save & Restore 2006 is a new product based largely on Ghost
technology. Compared to Ghost 10, the new features offered by Save and Restore
are: specific file and folder backup, group backup by file type, integration of
the Norton Protection Centre console and the ability to trigger a backup from
Norton Internet Security 2006 virus or worm outbreak notifications.
Generally Symantec products all have a cosmetically polished presentation and
user interface. Norton Save & Restore is no exception, although installation
turns out to be a bit of a minefield.
The start-up splash screen from the product CD offers a choice of Install,
Driver validation, Update locator, Read me, or Watch a product tour. The first
and the last two options are fairly self evident.
Driver validation checks to see if the device drivers present within the
recovery OS are sufficient to operate the essential device services required
during recovery (during system recovery Save & Restore loads and runs within
its own operating system). Update locator searches for any Norton anti-virus
definitions present on your disk and saves them to a desktop folder.
During installation a message appears recommending that you first test the
‘Symantec Recovery Environment’ by booting from the product CD, in effect
dry-running the system recovery procedure.
You are advised to refer to ‘the online help file’ for more information, but,
since the product, including the online help, has yet to be installed, this
isn’t possible. Exploring the CD doesn’t reveal any obvious help on this issue.
During the install procedure an option is displayed to run the driver
validation, which does test the recovery environment.
Although obviously dependent on your system specification, booting system
recovery from the CD is a fairly slow process that can take several minutes. As
the recovery environment boots, a brief message is displayed advising you to
press F6 to install any SCSI, Raid or Sata drivers required. Just as with an
original Windows install, these will need to be on floppy disk and hence your
system must include a floppy drive in this case.
Eventually you are presented with a user licence agreement screen which bears
the warning ‘This software contains a Microsoft security feature that will cause
your system to reboot, without prior notification, after 24 hours of continuous
use’. This refers to the recovery environment, not the software, but it’s not
clear and the hard-copy manual mentions none of this in the section covering
installation.
Installation requires activation which generates a further product key. This
is needed for any future installs and you’re encouraged to create a Norton
account and register the product. It’s all a bit of a nuisance when all you want
to do is get up and running.
Rather than provide direct access to all its controls through its menu
structure, Norton Save & Restore makes extensive use of wizards, with hidden
controls that only appear when needed.
While obviously intended to help the user, in practice this can be unsettling
and makes it difficult to grasp the overall architecture of the program. This is
a common mistake when wizards are implemented without providing an alternative
route to perform the same tasks.
This article is part of a
group
test drive-imaging software.
See also:
Acronis
True Image 10 Home
Paragon
Hard Disk Manager 8
R-Tools
R-Drive Image 3.0
Runtime
Software Drive Image XML
Graphs and table of features can be read via our pdf download above.
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