It was also possible that there was a problem with the Acer’s hardware itself possibly some hardware problem was also the reason why Windows had suddenly gone flaky on this machine. It did seem possible that the Linux programming in that version of Acronis was not compatible with the Acer’s hardware. Another search led, like the first, to a number of remarks focused on the Linux kernel. In another thread, a simple system restart apparently solved the problem. ![]() I believed the system was frozen.Ī search brought up a discussion thread in which the problem appeared to be the computer hardware. The hard drive light displayed no sign of disk activity. ![]() Usb 1-1: new high speed USB device number 2 using ehci_hcd When I tried booting the Acer with this Acronis USB drive, it looked like Acronis was going to run, but then it started scrolling what appeared to be Linux command-line information down the screen. That is, the Acronis USB drive would function about the same as an Acronis CD: just plug it in, turn the machine on, keep hitting F12 during the initial power-up to bring up a boot menu, choose the appropriate (USB or CD) drive, and Acronis would run. This one had been created using Unetbootin or some similar tool to create a single-purpose bootable USB drive. I tried booting the Acer with one of those USB drives. I had Acronis in two forms: on CD and on two different USB drives. This post describes steps I took in response. ![]() ![]() Now I wanted to use Acronis to restore that image, replacing my defunct Windows 7 installation with the working earlier installation saved in that drive image. I had used Acronis True Image Home 2011 to make an image of drive C, where the operating system was installed. Its Windows 7 installation suddenly went south.
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