Solved Macrium Reflect Free installation problem

SaggyMaggyPoo

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I have 2 Dell laptops, bought at the same time, both same spec running Win 8.1.

After several failed attempts and lots of forum browsing I finally managed to create a System Image on one laptop, using Macrium Reflect Free edition with the latest update.

So I wanted to also do this on the other laptop.

First I installed Macrium. This installed and opened without any problem. I then searched for updates as the file was a few months old and updated to the latest version. After this it was not possible to open the program: 'Macrium Reflect Disk Imaging has stopped working'.

I uninstalled and tried again a few times with no success.

So I thought I would try to create an image before updating, but got a familiar (to me when using Macrium) VSS issue which aborts the process. When I got this issue on the other laptop, updating the the current version was part of the solution, hence doing this immediately on the second laptop.

So I decided to try a completely new install of the free edition from Macrium's website. This took a lot longer than the previous installs but eventually appeared to have completed successfully. But when trying to open the program I still get the 'stopped working' message.

Here are the details:

Problem signature:
Problem Event Name: APPCRASH
Application Name: Reflect.exe
Application Version: 5.3.7149.0
Application Timestamp: 53f0d0c0
Fault Module Name: ntdll.dll
Fault Module Version: 6.3.9600.17114
Fault Module Timestamp: 53649e73
Exception Code: c0000005
Exception Offset: 000000000009b250
OS Version: 6.3.9600.2.0.0.768.101
Locale ID: 2057
Additional Information 1: 4ce4
Additional Information 2: 4ce4e113bc4c505a641a15c39fea5d69
Additional Information 3: 92c4
Additional Information 4: 92c46470e27626491c72c1abfb657a48


Other helpful (to the reader) information:

I have set my antivirus (Emsisoft) to allow Macrium.
I do also have System Images created through Windows but I want an alternative just in case.

I am not that technical (a little knowledge is definitely proving to be a dangerous thing!) so simple explanations and guidance would be appreciated :)

And on that point, could someone please confirm if my VSS settings are correct. In Task Manager/Services tab VSS seems to have 2 settings: Stopped or Running. It is usually showing Stopped.

If I click to Open Services, the VSS entry is set to Manual.

So is Stopped/Manual the usual default?

Thank you
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Win8.1 64bit, Windows 10 TP on VMWare Player
    Computer type
    Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Dell Inspiron 15 3521
    CPU
    1.80 gigahertz Intel Core i5-3337U
    Motherboard
    Dell Inc. 0010T1 A00
    Memory
    8gb
    Graphics Card(s)
    Intel HD Graphics 4000
    Sound Card
    Realtek HD Audio & Intel Display Audio
    Hard Drives
    TOSHIBA MQ01ABD050 [Hard drive] (500.11 GB)
    Cooling
    Additional fan
    Mouse
    Kensington Trackball
    Browser
    IE
    Antivirus
    Emsisoft Internet Security, Malwarebytes free & antiexploit
I use Macrium.

Mine is stopped---

screenshot_120.jpg
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8.1.1 Pro with Media Center
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Gateway
    CPU
    AMD K140 Cores 2 Threads 2 Name AMD K140 Package Socket FT1 BGA Technology 40nm
    Motherboard
    Manufacturer Gateway Model SX2110G (P0)
    Memory
    Type DDR3 Size 8192 MBytes DRAM Frequency 532.3 MHz
    Graphics Card(s)
    ATI AMD Radeon HD 7310 Graphics
    Sound Card
    AMD High Definition Audio Device Realtek High Definition Audio USB Audio Device
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Name 1950W on AMD Radeon HD 7310 Graphics Current Resolution 1366x768 pixels Work Resolution 1366x76
    Screen Resolution
    Current Resolution 1366x768 pixels Work Resolution 1366x768 pixels
    Hard Drives
    AMD K140
    Cores 2
    Threads 2
    Name AMD K140
    Package Socket FT1 BGA
    Technology 40nm
    Specification AMD E1-1200 APU with Radeon HD Graphics
    Family F
    Extended Family 14
    Model 2
    Extended Model 2
    Stepping 0
    Revision ON-C0
    Instruction
    Browser
    Opera 24.0
    Antivirus
    Avast Internet Security
Thanks David,

Thought this would be okay along with the other setting at manual, so it gets started when needed. But I had read some threads where there were comments about 'Enabled' and 'Automatic' settings, which were confusing me somewhat.

As a Macrium user are you able to comment on the installation problem I posted?
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Win8.1 64bit, Windows 10 TP on VMWare Player
    Computer type
    Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Dell Inspiron 15 3521
    CPU
    1.80 gigahertz Intel Core i5-3337U
    Motherboard
    Dell Inc. 0010T1 A00
    Memory
    8gb
    Graphics Card(s)
    Intel HD Graphics 4000
    Sound Card
    Realtek HD Audio & Intel Display Audio
    Hard Drives
    TOSHIBA MQ01ABD050 [Hard drive] (500.11 GB)
    Cooling
    Additional fan
    Mouse
    Kensington Trackball
    Browser
    IE
    Antivirus
    Emsisoft Internet Security, Malwarebytes free & antiexploit
I have the paid version with the latest update.

I've never had any error messages.

As for the vss I do believe Macrium starts & closes it as needed.
I've seen something like, "closing VSS service" when the image is finished.

Maybe running this .bat file would help.
Download it & unblock it & run it as Administrator.---

View attachment dism.bat
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8.1.1 Pro with Media Center
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Gateway
    CPU
    AMD K140 Cores 2 Threads 2 Name AMD K140 Package Socket FT1 BGA Technology 40nm
    Motherboard
    Manufacturer Gateway Model SX2110G (P0)
    Memory
    Type DDR3 Size 8192 MBytes DRAM Frequency 532.3 MHz
    Graphics Card(s)
    ATI AMD Radeon HD 7310 Graphics
    Sound Card
    AMD High Definition Audio Device Realtek High Definition Audio USB Audio Device
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Name 1950W on AMD Radeon HD 7310 Graphics Current Resolution 1366x768 pixels Work Resolution 1366x76
    Screen Resolution
    Current Resolution 1366x768 pixels Work Resolution 1366x768 pixels
    Hard Drives
    AMD K140
    Cores 2
    Threads 2
    Name AMD K140
    Package Socket FT1 BGA
    Technology 40nm
    Specification AMD E1-1200 APU with Radeon HD Graphics
    Family F
    Extended Family 14
    Model 2
    Extended Model 2
    Stepping 0
    Revision ON-C0
    Instruction
    Browser
    Opera 24.0
    Antivirus
    Avast Internet Security
Thank you David.

Would you mind explaining what dism.bat is, and what I might expect to see if I run it (success and failure options maybe).
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Win8.1 64bit, Windows 10 TP on VMWare Player
    Computer type
    Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Dell Inspiron 15 3521
    CPU
    1.80 gigahertz Intel Core i5-3337U
    Motherboard
    Dell Inc. 0010T1 A00
    Memory
    8gb
    Graphics Card(s)
    Intel HD Graphics 4000
    Sound Card
    Realtek HD Audio & Intel Display Audio
    Hard Drives
    TOSHIBA MQ01ABD050 [Hard drive] (500.11 GB)
    Cooling
    Additional fan
    Mouse
    Kensington Trackball
    Browser
    IE
    Antivirus
    Emsisoft Internet Security, Malwarebytes free & antiexploit
Thank you David.

Would you mind explaining what dism.bat is, and what I might expect to see if I run it (success and failure options maybe).

It runs sfc & dism & sfc again.

You can open it with Notepad & look at it.

or scan it with your antivirus program.

screenshot_120.jpg

just run it.it won't hurt anything.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Windows 8.1.1 Pro with Media Center
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Gateway
    CPU
    AMD K140 Cores 2 Threads 2 Name AMD K140 Package Socket FT1 BGA Technology 40nm
    Motherboard
    Manufacturer Gateway Model SX2110G (P0)
    Memory
    Type DDR3 Size 8192 MBytes DRAM Frequency 532.3 MHz
    Graphics Card(s)
    ATI AMD Radeon HD 7310 Graphics
    Sound Card
    AMD High Definition Audio Device Realtek High Definition Audio USB Audio Device
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Name 1950W on AMD Radeon HD 7310 Graphics Current Resolution 1366x768 pixels Work Resolution 1366x76
    Screen Resolution
    Current Resolution 1366x768 pixels Work Resolution 1366x768 pixels
    Hard Drives
    AMD K140
    Cores 2
    Threads 2
    Name AMD K140
    Package Socket FT1 BGA
    Technology 40nm
    Specification AMD E1-1200 APU with Radeon HD Graphics
    Family F
    Extended Family 14
    Model 2
    Extended Model 2
    Stepping 0
    Revision ON-C0
    Instruction
    Browser
    Opera 24.0
    Antivirus
    Avast Internet Security
Fault Module Name: ntdll.dll

Therein lies the issue...

Read here...
How To Fix Ntdll.dll Errors

I suspect this will need a refresh of the windows system files. Also, Dell are notorious for using their own drivers for windows internal stuff that really doesn't need any help.

Try checking the Dell site for updates, make sure the UEFI is at their latest incarnation and all drivers as well. I am using Reflect on an Acer laptop (win8.0) and Lenovo Miix (win8.1) tablet with no problems.

The problem is almost certainly not with Reflect.

Just one old fart's opinion. :)
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    win8.1
    Computer type
    Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Acer V5
    CPU
    i5
    Memory
    6GB
    Hard Drives
    240GB Sandisk SSD
    Internet Speed
    4G/LTE
If you cannot get this installation problem fixed (unfortunately I have no clue what could have happened), I suggest you use the recovery CD for imaging (and of course recovery).

You can download the recovery .iso from my OneDrive and burn that to CD. It works the same as the installed Macrium. Only small difference is that you cannot store the XML files and have to define the partition(s) you want to image and the repository for the image each time.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Vista and Win7
    System Manufacturer/Model
    2xHP, 2xGateway, 1xDell, 1xSony
    Hard Drives
    5 SSDs and 12 HDs
Thank you for all contributions.

Once I can get onto the laptop with the problem I will work through them and report back.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Win8.1 64bit, Windows 10 TP on VMWare Player
    Computer type
    Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Dell Inspiron 15 3521
    CPU
    1.80 gigahertz Intel Core i5-3337U
    Motherboard
    Dell Inc. 0010T1 A00
    Memory
    8gb
    Graphics Card(s)
    Intel HD Graphics 4000
    Sound Card
    Realtek HD Audio & Intel Display Audio
    Hard Drives
    TOSHIBA MQ01ABD050 [Hard drive] (500.11 GB)
    Cooling
    Additional fan
    Mouse
    Kensington Trackball
    Browser
    IE
    Antivirus
    Emsisoft Internet Security, Malwarebytes free & antiexploit
Thank you David.

Would you mind explaining what dism.bat is, and what I might expect to see if I run it (success and failure options maybe).

It runs sfc & dism & sfc again.

You can open it with Notepad & look at it.

or scan it with your antivirus program.

View attachment 49325

just run it.it won't hurt anything.

I can't give you any rep just now, David, so wanted to thank you for being so understanding with someone who isn't entirely confident about what they're doing :)
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Win8.1 64bit, Windows 10 TP on VMWare Player
    Computer type
    Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Dell Inspiron 15 3521
    CPU
    1.80 gigahertz Intel Core i5-3337U
    Motherboard
    Dell Inc. 0010T1 A00
    Memory
    8gb
    Graphics Card(s)
    Intel HD Graphics 4000
    Sound Card
    Realtek HD Audio & Intel Display Audio
    Hard Drives
    TOSHIBA MQ01ABD050 [Hard drive] (500.11 GB)
    Cooling
    Additional fan
    Mouse
    Kensington Trackball
    Browser
    IE
    Antivirus
    Emsisoft Internet Security, Malwarebytes free & antiexploit
You need to right click on the file (dism.bat) then select Run As Administrator
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    8.1x64PWMC Ubuntu14.04x64 MintMate17x64
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Home Brewed
    CPU
    I7 4970K OC'ed @4.7 GHz
    Motherboard
    MSI-Z97
    Memory
    16 GB G-Skill Trident X @2400MHZ
    Graphics Card(s)
    NVIDIA GeForce GTS 450
    Sound Card
    X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Professional Series
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Dual HP-W2408
    Screen Resolution
    1920X1200
    Hard Drives
    256 GB M2 sm951, (2) 500GB 850EVO, 5TB, 2 TB Seagate
    PSU
    Antec 850W
    Case
    Antec 1200
    Cooling
    Danger Den H20
    Keyboard
    Logitech
    Mouse
    Logitech Performance Mouse MX
    Internet Speed
    35/12mbps
    Browser
    Firefox
Hi there

One problem also with Macrium is that it requires the V.S.S (Volume Shadow Service) to be operational -- and if you don't have much HDD space available it will fail.

That's why I prefer things like Acronis (although paid) which can boot directly from a USB and work without needing ANYTHING running whatsoever -- (apart from the computer of course !!) -- even if the computer has BROKEN or Inoperable HDD's you can still restore to an external HDD which could then be swapped for the broken one to repair your machine.

While money is an issue for people I think that the relative cheap costs of decent commercial backup products are well worth the price -- especially if you think what the cost of retrieving your Music / Video / photo libraries are or even restoring important scanned documents like Tax returns etc.

(I'd hate to re-rip 3,000 CD's again -- even if I had them all, plus re-tag loads of music and download again -- no thanks -- a 45 USD decent backup / restore program worth it for me EVERY TIME. I'd avoid all those that rely on using the VSS).

If you really want FREE though -- learn a little bit of Linux, download a bootable LIVE CD (on a USB !!) and use the DD command for backup / restore -- although complex it will copy and restore byte for byte everything that's on an HDD whatever the partition type -- use carefully though as it's quite a complex command.

Cheers
jimbo
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Linux Centos 7, W8.1, W7, W2K3 Server W10
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    Monitor(s) Displays
    1 X LG 40 inch TV
    Hard Drives
    SSD's * 3 (Samsung 840 series) 250 GB
    2 X 3 TB sata
    5 X 1 TB sata
    Internet Speed
    0.12 GB/s (120Mb/s)
One way around the VSS problem is to run the Macrium imaging from the recovery CD. VSS is only needed to 'freeze' the initial image so that you can continue working on the PC whilst the image is being recorded. But if you run from the CD, that case does not exist.

I wonder how Acronis does that because if you want to continue using the PC whilst the image is written, they must use some scheme to lock down the image.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Vista and Win7
    System Manufacturer/Model
    2xHP, 2xGateway, 1xDell, 1xSony
    Hard Drives
    5 SSDs and 12 HDs
You need to right click on the file (dism.bat) then select Run As Administrator

Realised this after watching messages scrolling on my screen for a while. I (foolishly) thought that being logged into an admin account would mean I was running things as an admin anyway. Oh well, always something new to learn.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Win8.1 64bit, Windows 10 TP on VMWare Player
    Computer type
    Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Dell Inspiron 15 3521
    CPU
    1.80 gigahertz Intel Core i5-3337U
    Motherboard
    Dell Inc. 0010T1 A00
    Memory
    8gb
    Graphics Card(s)
    Intel HD Graphics 4000
    Sound Card
    Realtek HD Audio & Intel Display Audio
    Hard Drives
    TOSHIBA MQ01ABD050 [Hard drive] (500.11 GB)
    Cooling
    Additional fan
    Mouse
    Kensington Trackball
    Browser
    IE
    Antivirus
    Emsisoft Internet Security, Malwarebytes free & antiexploit
One way around the VSS problem is to run the Macrium imaging from the recovery CD. VSS is only needed to 'freeze' the initial image so that you can continue working on the PC whilst the image is being recorded. But if you run from the CD, that case does not exist.

I wonder how Acronis does that because if you want to continue using the PC whilst the image is written, they must use some scheme to lock down the image.

Hi there

I'm not sure I would want to image a running system - I would do it from a bootable program - but I believe Acronis holds some sort of Cache where changes to files are held and then does a final update at the end of the process -- but in any case I don't think it's good practice to work on a system you are currently backing up -- a backup these days shouldn't take more than 30 Mins for the OS - and if you want data archives just run overnight.

I don't know how Acronis works but I'm sure it doesn't use VSS though even when running under Windows.

Cheers
jimbo
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Linux Centos 7, W8.1, W7, W2K3 Server W10
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    Monitor(s) Displays
    1 X LG 40 inch TV
    Hard Drives
    SSD's * 3 (Samsung 840 series) 250 GB
    2 X 3 TB sata
    5 X 1 TB sata
    Internet Speed
    0.12 GB/s (120Mb/s)
There is nothing wrong to work with a system that is currently writing an image - at least not with Macrium. I have done that for years amd mothing bad ever happened.

The length of time it takes depends on the speed of the drives involved and the size of the data in the partition. For imaging C I have seen anything from 5 minutes (from SSD to SSHD on eSata) to 30 minutes from SSD to a slow external disk on USB2.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Vista and Win7
    System Manufacturer/Model
    2xHP, 2xGateway, 1xDell, 1xSony
    Hard Drives
    5 SSDs and 12 HDs
If you cannot get this installation problem fixed (unfortunately I have no clue what could have happened), I suggest you use the recovery CD for imaging (and of course recovery).

You can download the recovery .iso from my OneDrive and burn that to CD. It works the same as the installed Macrium. Only small difference is that you cannot store the XML files and have to define the partition(s) you want to image and the repository for the image each time.

Thank you for this suggestion. So does this mean that I can create a System Image through a Macrium Recovery CD (which I already have) rather than installing and running the program from the laptop?

And the 'small' differences you mention above are not something I understand. Does the System Image process help you through defining the partition(s) and what are the implications of not being able to store the XML files?
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Win8.1 64bit, Windows 10 TP on VMWare Player
    Computer type
    Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Dell Inspiron 15 3521
    CPU
    1.80 gigahertz Intel Core i5-3337U
    Motherboard
    Dell Inc. 0010T1 A00
    Memory
    8gb
    Graphics Card(s)
    Intel HD Graphics 4000
    Sound Card
    Realtek HD Audio & Intel Display Audio
    Hard Drives
    TOSHIBA MQ01ABD050 [Hard drive] (500.11 GB)
    Cooling
    Additional fan
    Mouse
    Kensington Trackball
    Browser
    IE
    Antivirus
    Emsisoft Internet Security, Malwarebytes free & antiexploit
Hi there

One problem also with Macrium is that it requires the V.S.S (Volume Shadow Service) to be operational -- and if you don't have much HDD space available it will fail.

That's why I prefer things like Acronis (although paid) which can boot directly from a USB and work without needing ANYTHING running whatsoever -- (apart from the computer of course !!) -- even if the computer has BROKEN or Inoperable HDD's you can still restore to an external HDD which could then be swapped for the broken one to repair your machine.

While money is an issue for people I think that the relative cheap costs of decent commercial backup products are well worth the price -- especially if you think what the cost of retrieving your Music / Video / photo libraries are or even restoring important scanned documents like Tax returns etc.

(I'd hate to re-rip 3,000 CD's again -- even if I had them all, plus re-tag loads of music and download again -- no thanks -- a 45 USD decent backup / restore program worth it for me EVERY TIME. I'd avoid all those that rely on using the VSS).

If you really want FREE though -- learn a little bit of Linux, download a bootable LIVE CD (on a USB !!) and use the DD command for backup / restore -- although complex it will copy and restore byte for byte everything that's on an HDD whatever the partition type -- use carefully though as it's quite a complex command.

Cheers
jimbo

Thank you Jimbo.

What I actually want is something that is straightforward enough for a non-technically minded person to use. I do try to deal with problems that I encounter but to be honest it isn't too long before I hit the point where I get concerned about 'breaking' things. So your suggestion to use something that is 'quite a complex command' unfortunately doesn't appeal at all!
I am pretty sure HDD space isn't my issue because there is plenty available.

But I seem to be in a loop - the pre-update Macrium gave me a VSS error (and VSS was running); the post-update Macrium worked on one laptop but won't open on the other. And my preference is for 1 product that will work on both laptops.

So maybe I will need to invest in something, though I'm loathe to choose Macrium if I can't get this version to open (and it took a lot of messing around to get it working on the other laptop in the first place).

The reason I'm spending so much time trying to implement a good back-up strategy using more than one method (Windows plus another) is to avoid the cost of needing to replace a laptop following some sort of failure. Our last 2 HP laptops lasted around 3 and 4 years respectively. The Dell we had previously lasted a good 10 years, so we've put our faith in Dell again (saying a quick prayer!). And living on a fairly tight budget I do like to try popular and recommended free products first where I can.

But I think it could be a good idea to have something that also lets me restore to another machine, to get around this annoying habit of Microsoft to license the WIndows software just for the life of the machine. So that definitely puts me in the purchasing arena I guess :think:.
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Win8.1 64bit, Windows 10 TP on VMWare Player
    Computer type
    Laptop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Dell Inspiron 15 3521
    CPU
    1.80 gigahertz Intel Core i5-3337U
    Motherboard
    Dell Inc. 0010T1 A00
    Memory
    8gb
    Graphics Card(s)
    Intel HD Graphics 4000
    Sound Card
    Realtek HD Audio & Intel Display Audio
    Hard Drives
    TOSHIBA MQ01ABD050 [Hard drive] (500.11 GB)
    Cooling
    Additional fan
    Mouse
    Kensington Trackball
    Browser
    IE
    Antivirus
    Emsisoft Internet Security, Malwarebytes free & antiexploit
So does this mean that I can create a System Image through a Macrium Recovery CD (which I already have) rather than installing and running the program from the laptop?
Yes, you can use it to create backup and restore for any PC offline ie. boot it up from the CD/USB then select Backup tab. To restore, select the restore tab.
Does the System Image process help you through defining the partition(s) and what are the implications of not being able to store the XML files?
When creating a backup, on the final step, you have a choice to create an XML definition file associated with this backup. This file contains information on how you set up the backup such as partitions you selected, the destination folder/HD where you want to store the image, the name of the backup image file... So the next time you want to create a backup, you only need to open it then everything is pre-defined for you. Personally, I don't use it.

EDIT: Just notice that you have Emisoft Anti Virus installed. Did you turn it off when trying to install Macrium ???
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    8.1x64PWMC Ubuntu14.04x64 MintMate17x64
    Computer type
    PC/Desktop
    System Manufacturer/Model
    Home Brewed
    CPU
    I7 4970K OC'ed @4.7 GHz
    Motherboard
    MSI-Z97
    Memory
    16 GB G-Skill Trident X @2400MHZ
    Graphics Card(s)
    NVIDIA GeForce GTS 450
    Sound Card
    X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Professional Series
    Monitor(s) Displays
    Dual HP-W2408
    Screen Resolution
    1920X1200
    Hard Drives
    256 GB M2 sm951, (2) 500GB 850EVO, 5TB, 2 TB Seagate
    PSU
    Antec 850W
    Case
    Antec 1200
    Cooling
    Danger Den H20
    Keyboard
    Logitech
    Mouse
    Logitech Performance Mouse MX
    Internet Speed
    35/12mbps
    Browser
    Firefox
So does this mean that I can create a System Image through a Macrium Recovery CD
Yes, it is the same thing.

And the 'small' differences you mention above are not something I understand
The XML files are used to store your definitions and can be used when you want to make an image with the same definitions (source and target) a second or third time. It is just a convenience - no big deal. The XML files are in the 'Reflect' folder in Documents.

You use them by highlighting the XML definition you want and then you click on the cog wheel. Then the imaging will start with the source and target from the definition in the XML file. Example:

2014-08-25_1544.png
 

My Computer

System One

  • OS
    Vista and Win7
    System Manufacturer/Model
    2xHP, 2xGateway, 1xDell, 1xSony
    Hard Drives
    5 SSDs and 12 HDs
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