I regard the Windows imaging tool as broken for the purpose of burning to DVD. I think it worked in early versions of Windows 7, but then they broke it in a later version. By the time they included the Win 7 tool in Win 8 (!!), DVD support was clearly broken, or I forget, not even presented as an option.

But it should work fine if you save the image to a hard drive, a network share, or a *large* USB flash drive.

Or use something other than the native Windows tool if you want to burn to DVD's.

On 10/4/2014 12:24 AM, "J. Van Brimmer" wrote:
That's what I intend to do once I get the DVDs created. I was having trouble with the Windows backup tool writing to my external ASUS DVD-RW USB drive. It seemed to write data to disc 1, and then it would tell me to insert another disc larger than 1GB as Disc 1 again. I'll have to retry that tomorrow. Not sure what's going on there. I was using 4.7GB DVD-R discs. I just can't express how much I dislike *dows. There were no messages that Disc 1 was complete, or anything similar.


On Fri, Oct 3, 2014 at 6:50 PM, Israel <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Hi,
    Every so often I get a computer with windows on it, and I resize
    the windows partition for the person, so they can run their
    Windows only apps.
    I have never once had an issue.  But really, most of the time, I
    only use Windows to update the BIOS.
And then the next thing I do is install a flavour of Ubuntu. Usually Lubuntu, but sometimes Xubuntu.

    That said, I never use the Windows partitioner.  I manually
    partition the system inside the LiveCD. Windows has always
    "worked" during those times. Usually, though it is better to
    reinstall Windows so you get a fresh registry.  Though the newer
    NT based versions seem to handle things a bit better, they always
    seem to get slower, and full of viruses after they have been used
    for somewhere around a year.

    Most of the 'broken' computers I get have windows issues.  I had
    one that the sound wasn't working, and the DVD drive no longer
    functioned (in windows).  I simply booted a live CD (yes the drive
    did work), and voila... everything was working.



    On 10/03/2014 08:15 PM, "J. Van Brimmer" wrote:
    Yeah, I understand that it's a loaded question. I was just
    wondering if anyone here had tried it before. After I get my DVD
    images complete and tested, I'm going to try it.

    On Fri, Oct 3, 2014 at 5:30 PM, Andre Rodovalho
    <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

        Nobody will answer you for sure. Even if you contact Windows
        support... Give it a try. If you have any problems, you
        restore that. Better now that you have nothing on your
        Windows than later...

        PS: Windows 7 requires 20GB for 64bits architecture.

        2014-10-03 20:26 GMT-03:00 "J. Van Brimmer"
        <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>:

            It has a 500Gb hard drive, but the "C" partition was only
            about 460Gb. When I ran the Partitoner from inside
            Windows, it would only shrink "C" down to 226Gb.

            I just now booted up a Lubuntu live 14.04 disc and ran
            Gparted from inside Lubu. Gparted says I can shrink "C"
            down to 36.6 Gb minimum. But, I have no problem leaving
            it at 100 Gb. I just want to know, if I shrink it down
            below the 226 Gb boundary set by the Windows
            partitioner, will it clobber Windows? Will I have to
            factory restore the system just to have a running windows?

            I am tempted to just wipe the whole disc, but I thought
            if I can shrink "C" down to 100 Gb, I'd leave it there.


            On Fri, Oct 3, 2014 at 2:40 PM, Aere Greenway
            <[email protected]
            <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

                On 10/03/2014 11:30 AM, "J. Van Brimmer" wrote:
                Hello,

                I have just acquired a "new" refurbished Lenovo
                X140e netbook. tI has Windows 7 Pro on it. The first
                thing I did after booting it up was to go into
                Partition Management to shrink the C partition to
                make room for Lubuntu. I was shocked to discover
                that the partition manager would only shrink C by
                50%. So, I went ahead and did that.

                Then, I booted up a live CD of Gparted. Gparted says
                I can shrink C way down a lot more. I don't remember
                how far it was, but it was way down, less than 100 GB.

                Can I safely follow Gparted's recommendation and not
                impact Winbroke? I am not too terribly worried about
                it though. I am going to create a restore image DVD,
                but I just thought I'd ask to see if anyone has any
                experience on this before I get started.

                Thanks,

-- ->Jerry<-


                Jerry:

                I once had a Windows partition that I re-sized way
down to a size that seemed reasonable at the time. It seemed reasonable because I only use that system
                for testing.

                A year or so later, that system was in-trouble
                because of insufficient space.

                The culprit?  The space was used up by the multitude
                of Windows updates.

                I had to re-size the Windows partition to a larger
                size to rescue the system (which involved resizing
                and even moving my Linux partitions).

                So by word of experience, in re-sizing a Windows
                partition, be sure to leave it room to install the
                many necessary Windows updates.  On Windows 7 and
                above, it also creates a restore-point whenever you
                install anything, and those restore-points take up
                disk space as well.

                I do recommend keeping your Windows partition around
                (and usable) if you have one.  Over the years, there
                have been many cases where I was glad I saved it for
                those occasional things that won't run on Linux, or
                for which Linux has no practical alternative.

                Linux has been very reliable in re-sizing all of my
                Windows partitions. In over 10 years of experience,
                it only failed once, and in that case, there may have
                been disk errors in the Windows partition. So make
                sure you do a disk check of the Windows partition
                before re-sizing it.

                Beware that on Windows 8, it may leave its partition
                in a 'suspend' (hibernate) state, so re-sizing it
                could give you problems.

-- Sincerely,
                Aere




-- ->Jerry<-

            --
            Lubuntu-users mailing list
            [email protected]
            <mailto:[email protected]>
            Modify settings or unsubscribe at:
            https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/lubuntu-users





-- ->Jerry<-




-- Regards


    --
    Lubuntu-users mailing list
    [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
    Modify settings or unsubscribe at:
    https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/lubuntu-users




--
->Jerry<-





-- 
Lubuntu-users mailing list
[email protected]
Modify settings or unsubscribe at: 
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/lubuntu-users

Reply via email to