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Re: OT--Win7 and disk partitions



Thank you. It looks like this is my ticket to paradise.

Regards,
Harry

Excuse me for writing gibberish! I will try to reformulate: If you are restoring to the same disk, the restore is fully functional without any further steps (i.e. you not need any keys). When you are restoring the disk image to a new physical disk and the software activation scheme (i.e. copy protection) is tied to a physical disk ID, you will probably need new keys from software vendors. It is as if you had bought a new computer. The best feature of this software is the ability to go back to any certain date when everything was working perfectly. Or you can restore just one file that you mistakenly overwrote. Just schedule automated backups and you are pretty much secure. Best regards, Kari Eveli LEXITEC Book Publishing (Finland) lexitec@xxxxxxxx *** Lexitec Online *** English summary of our services: http://www.lexitec.fi/sitesummary.html FileOpen-based ebook packaging and support: http://www.lexitec.fi/fileopen.html Acrobat Reader Treasure Trove: http://www.lexitec.fi/acrobat-reader.html English-Finnish-English Computer Terms: http://www.lexitec.fi/glossary.html XyWrite Utilities: http://www.lexitec.fi/xywrite/utility.html Home page (in Finnish): http://www.lexitec.fi/ ***My previous post: >Don't mean to drag this out, but to be clear: as long as I have a list of all those long strings of product ID keys, activation keys, whatever you call them, I wouldn't have to locate and re-install programs and their customization? If you are restoring to the same disk, the restore is fully functional without any further steps (i.e. you not need any keys), but if the activation scheme is tied to a physical disk ID, you will probably need new keys from software vendors. It is as if you had bought a new computer.
Harry Binswanger hb@xxxxxxxx