BTW I am having success with the wine installs that I never had before. Not enough to write about yet. Generally I like to understand the subject I write about.....I said generally.

Sounds dodgy. Programs and applications will have to be re-installed and re-compiled. Standalone binaries aren't common in Linux since most applications are compiled with the appropriate libraries and kernel headers at the versions they happened to be at during installation, even when installed through package managers.droppointalpha wrote:What if I installed Mint on the dual boot drive as one normally would, then wiped over the installed data with the cloned partition contents? The grub links should still refer to the correct files in the correct partitions, but the rest of those contents are all the materials I have here, without the effort of hunting down every program I've acquired and finding its origin (or recompiling from source).
I have a few standalone binaries, mostly compiled security stuff and capture software.kode-niner wrote: Sounds dodgy. Programs and applications will have to be re-installed and re-compiled. Standalone binaries aren't common in Linux since most applications are compiled with the appropriate libraries and kernel headers at the versions they happened to be at during installation, even when installed through package managers.
Restoring a clone is by far the best way to deal with migrating systems. Dealing with any grub problems should be relatively easy.
That sounds like what I am looking for. I really do not want to re-edit bash for aliases I like, reconfigure wine, put all my VPN information back in, reconfigure my browsers, reinstall all my navigation software, find/list/reinstall all those little CLI programs I like to use on occasion.Shawn wrote:Just to add 25 cents worth of info...
Acronis is Linux based....Once you boot from the Acronis boot disk, it's a linux machine.
There is an option to clone each partition or the entire drive and ALL partitions. Acronis sees all of your partitions, even hidden bootloader partitions.... If anyone is still concerned, Acronis will do a block by block backup also.
I see no reason someone can't use Acronis to even make a working recovery image for a dual boot system. If you use their universal restore, you can even restore that image to a different machine with different hardware...(More of a windows issue)....Acronis does recognize usb sticks and usb HDD's...
Eats USB ports... The most I try carry is my two external drives, power cord, required USB cords, and a single DVD case with two special purpose live discs.Shawn wrote: https://www.google.com/search?q=acronis ... HgodICED_w
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I just looked back and saw this is a CF30..That makes this SOO much easier....
How about dual bootable drives and you do not need to carry anything external???
Read this thread....http://www.toughbooktalk.com/viewtopic. ... it=sandisk....
Install windows on the usb and change boot order in bios when you need a windows system...