Quantcast
PC World: Technology Advice You Can Trust
Find a Review
Free Newsletters
Receive the latest reviews, how-to's, news, and more.
Weekly Brief
Daily Downloads
Daily Technology News
WiFi Finder
Locate wireless services by a specific address, city, state, country, airport, or zip code.
RSS Feeds
Get our latest content via convenient RSS feeds.
Latest News
Today @ PC World
Become a PCW Member
Join the community and start enjoying the benefits:
  • Get tech advice from thousands of PC World Members
  • Rate and recommend the latest tech products
  • Share your thoughts in blog and article comments
  • Get free excerpts and exclusive discounts on Super Guides
Read More About: Backup Utilities

Copy, Back Up Your PC's Drive With Ease

Drive-imaging utilities from PowerQuest and Acronis can work within Windows.

Lincoln Spector

Thursday, June 27, 2002 12:00 PM PDT
Recommend this story?

Drive imaging, the best way to back up your entire hard drive for disaster recovery, used to require rebooting to DOS. New software now allows you to do much of the chore in Windows. I looked at shipping versions of Drive Image 2002, from longtime contender PowerQuest, and True Image Deluxe, a new entrant in the field from Acronis.

For Drive Image 2002 ($70), PowerQuest substantially overhauled its predecessor, version 5, though the new version remains backward-compatible. New features include LAN support and a scheduler with a great new option. After scheduling an image creation, you may tell the scheduler to wait until you shut Windows down to run Drive Image. When you instruct your PC to shut down, a small program that monitors Windows then proceeds to launch Drive Image.

Best of all, Drive Image has partitioning capabilities. This is important because the easiest place to put an image of your hard drive is onto the hard drive itself--but that requires a second partition. In contrast, True Image Deluxe, $50, doesn't include this.

Though less versatile than Drive Image, True Image is a cheaper, easier-to-use imaging tool. Both programs support CD-R, CD-RW, Iomega's Zip and Jaz, and other storage devices; both run in Windows; and both come with a bootable, non-Windows environment for situations where running in Windows isn't practical.

You can interact completely with Drive Image from inside Windows (version 5 offered limited Windows usability). But if you tell it to back up or restore the system partition (the one containing your Windows folder, probably your C:\ partition), the program will have to exit Windows, reboot, do the backup (or restore), and then reboot your system. For other partitions, Drive Image can do its backup and restoration from inside Windows.

For its part, True Image can back up the system partition while Windows is running, but it must exit Windows if you ever need to restore the C:\ partition.

Neither program is hard to use, but True Image is slightly easier--both because it relies more completely on wizards and because it offers fewer options. Unfortunately, one missing option is quite important: True Image can't verify the quality of a backup. As a result, you may not know that a backup is bad until you try to restore it. This drawback alone should make you think twice about buying this software.

True Image isn't so simple to use when you try to restore an image from multiple discs. It's not clear which CD you should put in first. And when it's time to insert another CD, you're told: 'The drive is not ready. A possible reason may be poor media quality'. That's not a comforting message to receive if you're recovering from a disaster. Acronis may correct True Image Deluxe's problems in some future version, but until then the $20 extra for Drive Image 2002 is clearly money well spent.


SUMMARY
PowerQuest Drive Image 2002



The best drive-imaging tool now has an improved Windows interface.

List: $70


SUMMARY
Acronis True Image Deluxe



New, cheaper imaging program is even easier to use than Drive Image 2002 but has major flaws.

List: $50


Recommend this story?
Latest News
Nortel surveys gadget-users in search of "hyperconnected" workers. 17-May-2008
The Guinness Book of Records confirms Grand Theft Auto IV takes the crown for debut entertainment sales. 17-May-2008
The malware continues to grow, hitting the dubious distinction of biggest spammer. 17-May-2008
A strong showing in April means Nintendo's console will likely surpass Xbox 360 sales sooner than expected. 17-May-2008
Hewlett-Packard's acquisition of Electronic Data Systems won't hurt Dell in the next few years, but it could affect Dell's... 16-May-2008
Microsoft confirms that it has yanked parts of a backup feature from a major upgrade to its Windows Home Server. 16-May-2008
HP confirms that some users of its AMD-based desktops have had problems after installing Windows XP Service Pack 3. 16-May-2008
The days of imagining Wi-Fi blanketing a city are over with the exit of the last major municipally focused Wi-Fi service provider. 16-May-2008
In its continued attempt to convince business customers to adopt Vista, Microsoft has outlined and tried to explain some of... 16-May-2008
Sony Friday revealed a list of 15 upcoming games for the PlayStation 3, PS2 and PSP. 16-May-2008

PC World's Marketplace

PC World's Free Whitepapers

Name City
Address 1 State Zip
Address 2 E-mail (optional)