When I first started using Ghost, somewhere around 1997 (when it first came out) it was only a DOS program that fit nicely on a single 3.5" floppy disk.
I lost track of it for a few years and then was re-introduced to it in version 2002.
I learned very quickly to put 'Mouse.com' on my Ghost boot disk and run it from the Autoexec.bat file.
Ghost is so much easier to run (in DOS) if I can use my mouse. Just a few mouse clicks and the job is done.
Mouse.com can only work with a PS2 mouse, so I put my USB, MS digital mouse on one of those little
green USB to PS2 adapters and plugged it into the PS2 mouse port on the mobo. It works great in
both Windows and Ghost.
I've assisted users all over the world in setting up their own Ghost backup systems and they love it,
for its simplicity and its effectiveness.
Ghost 2003, build 796 works great for XP, but fails to do a restore to a bootable condition for Vista/Win-7.
I found that Ghost 11.5 will indeed back up and restore Windows Vista and 7 and still works in DOS,
albeit too large for a floppy disk. It does work great from a CD or Flash Drive. Ghost 11.5 looks and runs
exactly like Ghost 2003, so there's no learning curve when upgrading to 11.5 from 2003.
There is one whole forum dedicated to various versions of Ghost. This link should work.
Radified Community Forums - Index
In all fairness, I much admit that I've also experimented with Acronis True Image and found that it indeed
does work, albeit somewhat more complicated with all the GUI. I used the installed program to make the
recovery CD and then always ran the program from there, basically in DOS. Once you have the recovery
disk, you can delete the program from the hard drive (in Windows).
Just a thought.....