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212 of 231 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
It works if you are willing to put up with bugs and errors,
By
This review is from: Norton Ghost 14.0 [OLD VERSION] (CD-ROM)
Symantec Ghost 14 seems to be a merge of features between Symantec's older Ghost product line with Symantec's disastrous "save and restore" product, which for some strange reason is still offered in version 2.0.
You can see my reviews for Save and restore here on amazon to see why my copy ended up in the garbage can. I have been using ghost in its various incarnations for several years, when it used to run off a floppy drive, so i am very familiar with its capabilities. Symantec Ghost 14 can backup files or your entire computer's drives if so desired to another computer on a network or to a USB drive. It can do this on a schedule. The features of Ghost 14 on paper are impressive, so i decided to give it a test by installing the product on my laptop and creating a complete backup to a network drive on another computer. The entire backup was completed in less than 15 minutes. Then i decided to create an updated recovery disc for my laptop to do a full recovery, Ghost automatically recognized the fact that my original Recovery Disk had been burned to a rewriteable disc, and proceeded to erase and burn a new updated version on the same disc.. very impressive. Unfortunately, as soon as rebooted my laptop with the Recovery Disc and i put an ip address on the interface (i am not running DHCP on my network) i wasn't able to connect to the computer containing the backup, due to some kind of authentication error.. so no matter what i did, i wasn't able to get past this hurdle.. so i am left with a complete computer backup i am not able to access.. Imagine, how would you feel if you computer died and you weren't be able to restore, thanks to Symantec buggy software, despite having an entire backup of it??? What is the point of all the countless fancy features if this product fails at its most useful feature.. which is to restore your computer's hardrive in case of failure? For all intents and purposes, Norton Ghost 14 is another piece of semi-functional software.. with partially working features, pretty much like every product Symantec makes... I don't recommend purchasing this product, unless you are somewhat computer literate and are able to get through the bugs that are present in this product. UPDATE 1: When i booted my laptop using the recovery disc, every time i tried to map the recovery point share on a computer on the network, i keep on getting the following error message: A specified logon session does not exist. After doing some online research, i was able to figure out how to fix this error by entering the name of the computer followed by the login name in the following format compname\username when prompted for a user / password to map the drive. I will post another update to see if recovery works as advertised. UPDATE 2: When i booted my laptop using the updated recovery CD, and i mounted the recovery point using the compname\username trick to authenticate, i was able to dump the entire laptop's drive image and do a full recovery. The catch is that i work on the field, and I was able to find out the solution on my own, but less savvy users will probably have to resort to having to call Symantec, etc etc, so when you purchase this product expect to spend some time making it work and make sure you TEST the recovery process if you can.. because the last thing you want to find out is that your recovery process doesn't work when you really need it. UPDATE 3: I tried to create a backup of my Windows 2000 Dell laptop.. but Norton Ghost 14 doesn't support Windows 2000.. so beware. UPDATE 4: Unlike Norton's disastrous Save and Restore, Ghost doesn't go on the internet and check the serial number every time you install it on a computer, I know this after i installed my copy of Save and Restore one too many times to one of my 4 computers and the serial number became "blacklisted" and the product ended up in the garbage can. This good news means that if you want want to make backups of multiple computers, you can just purchase ONE copy of Norton Ghost. UPDATE 5: Feb 2009 I just tried to move a hardrive with a bootable partition (Windows XP) and a data partition to a bigger SATA Drive with Norton Ghost 14. After installing the new hardrive on the computer and partitioning using Windows XP, i used Ghost to copy the bootable partition and the data partition to the new drive's partitions. The results were as follows: 1-The bootable partition copied ok, and the new drive boots from the partition, the only problem is that when i try to login into Windows XP, the system logs me off inmmediately. This is the same problem i had with Norton Save and Restore. 2-I spent over an hour copying the data partition using Ghost 14.. but at the end, the program gave me an error message telling me that the copy couldn't be copied because the system had ran out of memory. The data that i tried to copy was around 300Gb. After the Ghost error, all the data the program had supposedly copied was inaccessible because the partition couldn't be mounted by Win XP, so i had to reformat the new partition using the disk utilities in Win XP and use Microsoft's FREE copy utility ROBOCOPY to copy all the files from one partition to another. The copy worked fine. Norton Ghost couldn't do something a FREE utility can. I ended up connecting a CD drive to the computer to boot from a Ghost 2003 CD, and used that program to copy the C partition to the new drive and was finally able to migrate to the new hardrive. UPDATE 6: 2009-11-14 I was forced to use Norton Ghost 14 to update my computer's laptop hardrive since Ghost 2003 cannot backup an active drive to a firewire connected external drive. So this is what i did: 1-I booted my laptop with the Norton Ghost 14 CD created specifically for my laptop when i installed the software on it. 2-i backed up my entire laptop hardrive to an external 1tb firewire drive.(bear in mind trying to backup the drive while Windows was running failed every time, so i had to boot from the Norton CD and back it up the old fashioned way.. just like in Ghost 2003!) 3-Physically replaced the laptop's old drive with the new one. 4-I booted my laptop with the Norton Ghost 14 CD. The software was able to find the recovery point in the firewire drive and i was able to do a recovery to the new drive. At no point i was prompted to restore the MBR or to make the new drive bootable. 5-You will think all is well, right? but when i booted the laptop off the new drive, what do you think happened? Nothing.. the drive refused to boot and i got a blank screen, because it didn't occur to the geniuses at Symantec that most new drives don't have bootable master records (MBR), so the data is in the new drive, but it won't boot. So i had to get my Windows XP CD, do a dummy installation so the drive boots, and then dump the Norton Ghost Image on the drive AGAIN. Only when i tried to restore the drive a second time i was prompted to restore the original drive image and the drive MBR.. What a joke! Symantec is the Microsoft of security and disk utility software, their consumer and pro-level software is garbage, and since their horrible products can't compete in the marketplace, the only way they can get market share is to buy other competing products / companies such as Altiris, Partition Magic and many others! This is the last time i brother with Symantec's garbage software. After this, i am uninstalling all traces of Ghost from my laptop and i looking for some other software package.. there has to be something better out there than this piece of junk. Needless to say, don't waste your time purchasing Norton Ghost 14, unless you want to spend endless hours trying to make it work.
65 of 71 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
backup = passed, but restore = failed!,
By
This review is from: Norton Ghost 14.0 [OLD VERSION] (CD-ROM)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Vista Home Basic and Home Premium users were unfortunately ripped off when the product didn't come with a standard backup feature built into the operating system. Thus, solutions like the legendary Norton Ghost.
- First good news is it installed within minutes on Vista x32 and x64 - Second good news is backing up to my external Maxtor One Touch was flawless. It backed up nearly 200GB in a little over an hour. - Third piece of good news is when making the Symantec Recovery Disc, you can tell it exactly where to find your driver files and load those onto the disc. But. . . - First "bad" news is the UI stinks to high heaven. Trying to go the simplified look with high feature rich innovation like of Apple didn't work here. Symantec failed miserably. I had to search online or in the Help more than once to figure out how to use many of the features. - Second bad news, is its failure to restore, which is an essential feature in a "backup & restore" solution. So many bad reviews on Amazon, but so few of the reviews anyone actually trying to do a OS restore. So you backup your pictures and docs to a USB drive, big deal. A manual copy & paste does that. But restoring a crashed OS is a key feature that should be tested. Suffice it to say, the restore process failed for me like it did for the few others who posted reviews where this was attempted - Third bad news is the online support for actual error messages stinks. If you get lucky and find an obscure message board with a fix, then count your blessings because the online knowledgebase from Symantec needs help for the Ghost v14 product. I'm a support manager by trade and every business report will tell you the #1 deflector of calls in to Support is to get online resources. . .Guess Symantec isn't partaking in standard business practices OVERALL: If you need something that will backup your data automatically, this works. But for the price you might try searching Sourceforge first to find a free solution. The worst part, every review that tried to do an OS restore, including myself, was unsuccessful. A key reason NOT to get this product.
26 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Norton Ghost 14... downhill battle,
By
This review is from: Norton Ghost 14.0 [OLD VERSION] (CD-ROM)
I had previously used Norton Ghost product in older versions (around Ghost 5 or so). Recently my parent's computer had a hard drive crash. After successfully diagnosing the problem and correcting it, I decided not to trust it in the future... and that I would ghost the old drive to a new, larger drive.
I had a limited amount of time, and wanted to get the now running PC returned, so I went over to the Norton site and paid full price for a download version of the software. Ghost 14 is very different than the older versions. First, it installs several services on your system. Second it comes with an iso image for a "recovery cd." The "recovery cd" has no ability to copy a drive. The only way to do it is through the windows drive copy function. Well, I tried this several times and the imaged drive would not boot into windows, and it froze before reaching the welcome screen. After several attempts at re-imaging I gave up and made a few phone calls. One of my friends came over with a CD boot disc made from Acronis which worked flawlessly on the first try. It seems I've wasted $80 on some useless software. This might be okay if you are looking for a program to automatically backup files to a second or external drive... but there's freeware programs that do that just fine without the need for all the services. PASS on Ghost 14.
65 of 78 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
norton,
This review is from: Norton Ghost 14.0 [OLD VERSION] (CD-ROM)
WARNING to anyone thinking about buying this product! Please understand that you will not be buying this product only RENTING it. If you do not renew every year the product stops working....COMPLETELY! I'm not just talking about updates, etc. It actually tells you that it has stopped working and it won't work unless you renew. I have just wasted more than 2 hours with Norton's online tech support. This is the case with ALL Norton products and I am quoting the tech.
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Does not backup all files despite a "full" backup and Ghost does not indicate files are not backed up.,
By John Waters (San Francisco, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Norton Ghost 14.0 [OLD VERSION] (CD-ROM)
I've been a Norton user for more than 10 years and had never experienced any issues other users reported until I came across Ghost 14. I upgraded from Ghost 12 to Ghost 14 six months ago and had been doing a drive backup every two weeks. Recently my laptop was stolen and when I try to do a restore, I found out certain files were missing from the every archive Ghost 14 created!!! During each backup session, Ghost 14 never gave any indication that some files were not backed up. Luckily the missing files were rarely changed and I was able to restore from the last Ghost 12 archive. Because of this, all my Ghost 14 backups made during the past six months are now questionable. I've no idea what other files Ghost 14 failed to include in the archive.
27 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Worst Backup Program Ever,
By
This review is from: Norton Ghost 14.0 [OLD VERSION] (CD-ROM)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Norton Ghost 14.0 was the first time that I tried Ghost. Previously, I had used Backup MyPC, Genie, and NovaBackup (my most recent backup program). I have never ever run into as many problems with any of these programs as I have with Norton Ghost. Although quite happy with NovaBackup, I was seduced by the good-looking user interface and screen shots of Ghost so I decided to give it a try with my brand-new, week-old Dell xps M1330 notebook running Vista Home Premium.
The trouble already started with attempting to create a customized Symantec Recovery Disk. It took me an hour and required a restart of my system in order to get this to work. The error messages that popped up just informed me that "no writeable media" were found in my DVD RW drive - although they were there. Symantec's website did not offer a single solution for this. Only a restart finally took care of it. Afterwards the disk was created without a problem. So far so good albeit exhausting and time-consuming... Next, I attempted to create my first backup. I had hooked up an external Western Digital 60 GB Passport drive for that purpose. The first screen told me that my backup would not fit on that drive without compression and that I could adjust the compression level in the next step. Fine by me. However, what was offered was only None (as in no compression), Standard, Medium, and High. Nowhere could I find which compression level would be sufficient in order to get this backup file on my drive. So I tried them all. Needless to say, that this took a long time but the result was always the same: All of a sudden I got another error message, stating "The Remote Procedure Call Failed". Not that this is a very user-friendly message in the first place, but at least this time I found a solution on the Symantec website. Meanwhile it was late afternoon and I had been busy with all of this since the morning. So I printed the solution and then went to work implementing it - this actually involved entering commands on the DOS level! But again I did not get very far because the command I was supposed to enter involved switching to Symantec folders which did not exist. Thus another DOS error message, stating that the folders entered could not be found. At which point I threw up my hands in the air, uninstalled Norton Ghost 14.0 and humbly went back to my faithful NovaBackup program.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Did not work,
This review is from: Norton Ghost 14.0 [OLD VERSION] (CD-ROM)
I own a Dell Dimension Computer with XP and a lot of installed software and I wanted to move my whole bootable C drive to a new larger drive. The software that came with my new Western Digital drive did not work. (Didn't expect it to really.) So I thought I'd just go top of the line and buy this. Big Mistake. I tried Norton Ghost 14 three different times and it simply would not make a bootable copy of my original. (Each attempt takes several hours on a big drive.) The software is buggy and will not do what it is supposed to do. If you want to clone your drive, download Acronis True Image. Acronis worked perfectly the first time. Not only that but the download gives you a 15 day free trial. (If you can't clone your drive in 15 days, you've got a big problem.)
Norton Ghost 14 is a big expensive piece of S@*& !!!! Acronis True Image, two thumbs up !!!!
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Bloated and Not Ready for Prime Time,
By Mike Donovan (Middle America) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Norton Ghost 14.0 [OLD VERSION] (CD-ROM)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Error after error. It's bloated with too much junk and doesn't do the main thing - the imaging - near as well as many of its lesser known competitors. Norton's latest 'GHOST' product can't hold a candle to simpler solutions from smaller companies like StorageCraft with their 'ShadowProtect' program, Acronis with their 'True Image' application or Paragon's imaging solution, 'Drive Backup'.
Save your money and get a much better program for imaging your hard drive for a LOT less money from one of the products mentioned above - all of which are far superior.
21 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
It works if you are willing to put up with errors and bugs,
By You can see my reviews for Save and restore here on amazon to see why my copy ended up in the garbage can. I have been using ghost in its various incarnations for several years, when it used to run off a floppy drive, so i am very familiar with its capabilities. Symantec Ghost 14 can backup files or your entire computer's drives if so desired to another computer on a network or to a USB drive. It can do this on a schedule. The features of Ghost 14 on paper are impressive, so i decided to give it a test by installing the product on my laptop and creating a complete backup to a network drive on another computer. The entire backup was completed in less than 15 minutes. Then i decided to create an updated recovery disc for my laptop to do a full recovery, Ghost automatically recognized the fact that my original Recovery Disk had been burned to a rewriteable disc, and proceeded to erase and burn a new updated version on the same disc.. very impressive. Unfortunately, as soon as rebooted my laptop with the Recovery Disc and i put an ip address on the interface (i am not running DHCP on my network) i wasn't able to connect to the computer containing the backup, due to some kind of authentication error.. so no matter what i did, i wasn't able to get past this hurdle.. so i am left with a complete computer backup i am not able to access.. Imagine, how would you feel if you computer died and you weren't be able to restore, thanks to Symantec buggy software, despite having an entire backup of it??? What is the point of all the countless fancy features if this product fails at its most useful feature.. which is to restore your computer's hardrive in case of failure? For all intents and purposes, Norton Ghost 14 is another piece of semi-functional software.. with partially working features, pretty much like every product Symantec makes... I don't recommend purchasing this product, unless you are somewhat computer literate and are able to get through the bugs that are present in this product. UPDATE 1: When i booted my laptop using the recovery disc, every time i tried to map the recovery point share on a computer on the network, i keep on getting the following error message: A specified logon session does not exist. After doing some online research, i was able to figure out how to fix this error by entering the name of the computer followed by the login name in the following format compname\username when prompted for a user / password to map the drive. I will post another update to see if recovery works as advertised. UPDATE 2: When i booted my laptop using the updated recovery CD, and i mounted the recovery point using the compname\username trick to authenticate, i was able to dump the entire laptop's drive image and do a full recovery. The catch is that i work on the field, and I was able to find out the solution on my own, but less savvy users will probably have to resort to having to call Symantec, etc etc, so when you purchase this product expect to spend some time making it work and make sure you TEST the recovery process if you can.. because the last thing you want to find out is that your recovery process doesn't work when you really need it. UPDATE 3: I tried to create a backup of my Windows 2000 Dell laptop.. but Norton Ghost 14 doesn't support Windows 2000.. so beware. UPDATE 4: Unlike Norton's disastrous Save and Restore, Ghost doesn't go on the internet and check the serial number every time you install it on a computer, I know this after i installed my copy of Save and Restore one too many times to one of my 4 computers and the serial number became "blacklisted" and the product ended up in the garbage can. This good news means that if you want want to make backups of multiple computers, you can just purchase ONE copy of Norton Ghost. UPDATE 5: Feb 2009 I just tried to move a hardrive with a bootable partition (Windows XP) and a data partition to a bigger SATA Drive with Norton Ghost 14. After installing the new hardrive on the computer and partitioning using Windows XP, i used Ghost to copy the bootable partition and the data partition to the new drive's partitions. The results were as follows: 1-The bootable partition copied ok, and the new drive boots from the partition, the only problem is that when i try to login into Windows XP, the system logs me off inmmediately. This is the same problem i had with Norton Save and Restore. 2-I spent over an hour copying the data partition using Ghost 14.. but at the end, the program gave me an error message telling me that the copy couldn't be copied because the system had ran out of memory. The data that i tried to copy was around 300Gb. After the Ghost error, all the data the program had supposedly copied was inaccessible because the partition couldn't be mounted by Win XP, so i had to reformat the new partition using the disk utilities in Win XP and use Microsoft's FREE copy utility ROBOCOPY to copy all the files from one partition to another. The copy worked fine. Norton Ghost couldn't do something a FREE utility can. I ended up connecting a CD drive to the computer to boot from a Ghost 2003 CD, and used that program to copy the C partition to the new drive and was finally able to migrate to the new hardrive. UPDATE 6: 2009-11-14 I was forced to use Norton Ghost 14 to update my computer's laptop hardrive since Ghost 2003 cannot backup an active drive to a firewire connected external drive. So this is what i did: 1-I booted my laptop with the Norton Ghost 14 CD created specifically for my laptop when i installed the software on it. 2-i backed up my entire laptop hardrive to an external 1tb firewire drive.(bear in mind trying to backup the drive while Windows was running failed every time, so i had to boot from the Norton CD and back it up the old fashioned way.. just like in Ghost 2003!) 3-Physically replaced the laptop's old drive with the new one. 4-I booted my laptop with the Norton Ghost 14 CD. The software was able to find the recovery point in the firewire drive and i was able to do a recovery to the new drive. At no point i was prompted to restore the MBR or to make the new drive bootable. 5-You will think all is well, right? but when i booted the laptop off the new drive, what do you think happened? Nothing.. the drive refused to boot and i got a blank screen, because it didn't occur to the geniuses at Symantec that most new drives don't have bootable master records (MBR), so the data is in the new drive, but it won't boot. So i had to get my Windows XP CD, do a dummy installation so the drive boots, and then dump the Norton Ghost Image on the drive AGAIN. Only when i tried to restore the drive a second time i was prompted to restore the original drive image and the drive MBR.. What a joke! Symantec is the Microsoft of security and disk utility software, their consumer and pro-level software is garbage, and since their horrible products can't compete in the marketplace, the only way they can get market share is to buy other competing products / companies such as Altiris, Partition Magic and many others! This is the last time i brother with Symantec's garbage software. After this, i am uninstalling all traces of Ghost from my laptop and i looking for some other software package.. there has to be something better out there than this piece of junk. Needless to say, don't waste your time purchasing Norton Ghost 14, unless you want to spend endless hours trying to make it work.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
FILE AND FOLDER BACKUP IS USELESS,
By just me (costa mesa, ca United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Norton Ghost 14.0 [OLD VERSION] (CD-ROM)
I wrote a review of this earlier but it was mysteriously deleted so I'll try one more time.
The 'files and folder' backup was designed by a moron. I had been using this for some time and didn't realize how useless this was until I tried to restore my files. The best way to explain this is by example. I tried to backup my 'documents and settings' folder. When you backup your files this way, ghost appears to create a bunch (lots) of files out of the data with meaningless filenames. When you restore, you have to search for a file or files by name. You can't specify a folder and if you search 'for all' it only displays an arbritrary number of files so you can't even select all files to restore. If you have a large number of files, you're out of luck. The list of files it displays includes a list of the folder names but you can't restore a folder; all you can do is open the folder and select files. When you restore a file, you have 3 options: 1) restore to the original (it claims that if the file already exists, the file is saved with an appended number, but I wasn't brave enough to try this), 2) restore to a new folder, 3) restore to a 'recovered' folder created by ghost. With options 2 and 3 when you restore the file, the pathname is not is not preserved even though ghost knows the pathname. There is no option to override this, so all your files get written to one folder. This is insanely stupid. I've used ghost for many years and I thought when symantec came out with symantec ghost is was an upgrade from the previous versions. This was incorrect. There are actually two editions of ghost. This version is based on 'driveimage', while the norton ghost solution product is based on the old original ghost. Unfortunately, symantec does not allow you to have both editions on your machine |
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Norton Ghost 14.0 [OLD VERSION] by Symantec (Windows Vista / XP)
$69.99 $24.99
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