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To: Wayne K who wrote (6849)11/15/1999 8:56:00 PM
From: Gottfried  Respond to of 110634
 
Wayne, very interesting problem. I know next to nothing
about the solution. PowerQuest has 'Drive Copy' which
makes an exact copy of your HD onto another HD.

powerquest.com

But I expect the OS settings between laptop and desktop PC
won't be the same. So you may not be able to use Drive Copy.

As for programs like Quicken, there is a utility which is
part of Norton. It is called transport wizard. Supposed to
transfer a copy of a program to another computer. I tried it
with MS Word 97 and it failed.

There is Iomega QuickSync: allows you to define a folder
[can have many subfolders] to synchronize onto a ZIP or JAZ
disk. Anytime a change is made inside that folder on the HD,
it instantly copies the change to the ZIP or JAZ. I have
used QuickSync for a few months. That could be used to copy
your up-to-date personal files from desktop to laptop.

Gottfried



To: Wayne K who wrote (6849)11/15/1999 9:57:00 PM
From: PMS Witch  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 110634
 
Computer mirroring ...

Some of what you're trying to do is possible, while other stuff may not work too well. First, you're working with different hardware platforms: Laptop and desktop. One advantage of Windows is that it surrounds your hardware and isolates it from your applications. In creating applications, developers only need consider how Windows works and are free to ignore the almost infinite hardware combinations available today. This is how software can work identically on both your desk and lap: Windows makes it possible.

So --- Each machine will need it's own Windows, adapted to its own unique hardware. Beyond this level, your machines are consistent: below this level, things vary. One size fits all doesn't work here.

For best results, maintain separate Windows installations on each machine.

You should install your software on each machine separately, (and legally too.) You can make choices which result in identical software environments, or you can choose to take advantage of unique features of each machine: the choice is yours. If you upgrade, you should upgrade machines separately too. Upgrades usually consist of more than simply replacing or adding files: Eg. registry settings get changed. You want to take advantage of any automation designed to make the job go smoothly.

Generally, you wouldn't need to re-download upgrades, but only copy what you downloaded to each machine. You would, however, need to install each upgrade separately. I'd be tempted to do one, make sure I'm happy with the results, then do the second one, but then again, I'm cautious.

As far as data files, this is one place where you can keep your machines synchronized quite easily. Many packages are available to address this need. Win98 has Briefcase. I don't need this functionality, nor have I ever used any of these packages, so I cannot comment on the utility of any or recommend one over another. If anyone can fill this gap in my knowledge, please jump in.

Cheers, PW.




To: Wayne K who wrote (6849)11/17/1999 8:19:00 AM
From: thecow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 110634
 
My question; is there a simple! solution available to allow me to mirror one system to the other should I revise, upgrade or otherwise change in some manner files in one or the other system whether these files be data or system files

This could be a solution to updating files. I have no experience with it but just ran across it through a newsletter(Lockergnome).

TheCow

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