I want to prepare an image for XP. I am looking for a utility which will clear out all machine specific drivers. Is this part of sysprep or another utility?
Try Norton Ghost 2003. I successfully used it to clone my system disk. I remember reading about preparing an image and if it works as well as the cloning did for me you will be satisfied.
I also have used Ghost in the past, but they had a problem sending the image to a network drive in the last version, so I switched to image cast. Nice program. I like it better.
Maybe I am asking this question wrong. I use Ghost 7.5 and it works very well. However, what I want to do is prepare 2 generic images. One for a desktop and one for a laptop so no matter what computer I use I can reimage it with the one "master" image. I run into a problem with the laptops. An image made on an "older" laptop will work fine for all of the older machines, but one made on the newer machines will not work on the older and vice versa. I haven't experimented as much with desktops but suspect it will be the same. When the image does not work it will not open Windows at all. It goes to the screen where I can choose, Safe Mode, Normal, etc. and nothing opens.
To make a "generic" image you will need to use sysprep to load all of the drivers that XP might need. I haven't created the perfect generic image yet, but I am getting closer.
We use sysprep to create generic images but takes too much time. I have used ghost images with specific hardware on different models of Dell Optiplex PC's and the only time XP has trouble is when original image had ACPI enabled in BIOS of original and not newly imaged PC. If you try to boot into safe mode, it hangs on agpcpq.sys Try updating BIOS or enable/disable ACPI.
We've been using Ghost here for years now. IF you create an image and then load it to another system with different hardware, you can just do a repair install with Win XP. Not the fastest way to do it, but it will get past the BSOD's. MCSE, A+
If, I understand what most people are saying, then I am doing this right. I use sysprep to prepare the machine and then make a GHOST image before going back into WINDOWS XP.
I will check into the ACPI setting because that may be the reason I have problems on certain laptops. I believe I will see this same behavior when I start working heavily with the new and old desktops as well.
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