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How to look up particular file names using DMDE?

How to look up particular file names using DMDE?

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DiamndQueen
Member
210
06-04-2023, 11:12 PM
#11
Thanks! I'll download it for you and check out what I can do afterward!
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DiamndQueen
06-04-2023, 11:12 PM #11

Thanks! I'll download it for you and check out what I can do afterward!

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Sakura_trick
Member
75
06-05-2023, 05:15 AM
#12
Just a brief question about this – so far it seems pretty clear, but I'm still curious. When cloning a 160 gb drive (which usually has about 30 gb of actual data), do I really need to have the full 160 gb available? My Linux laptop doesn’t have exactly 160 gb free, but the files on the 160gb HDD take up very little space. The files I recovered through DMDE were only around 1.5 gb in total. I guess the drive likely contains roughly 20-30 gb of data (os, games, etc.).
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Sakura_trick
06-05-2023, 05:15 AM #12

Just a brief question about this – so far it seems pretty clear, but I'm still curious. When cloning a 160 gb drive (which usually has about 30 gb of actual data), do I really need to have the full 160 gb available? My Linux laptop doesn’t have exactly 160 gb free, but the files on the 160gb HDD take up very little space. The files I recovered through DMDE were only around 1.5 gb in total. I guess the drive likely contains roughly 20-30 gb of data (os, games, etc.).

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XknockMC
Member
121
06-08-2023, 08:29 AM
#13
A duplicate will take over the whole storage device completely. Clearing all data from it is necessary. This must be performed on an entirely empty drive for the target.
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XknockMC
06-08-2023, 08:29 AM #13

A duplicate will take over the whole storage device completely. Clearing all data from it is necessary. This must be performed on an entirely empty drive for the target.

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Repertition
Member
186
06-15-2023, 03:40 PM
#14
Yes and that's fine with me honestly. I'm just trying to figure out the right size for the space. If I clone it to a USB stick, would a 160 GB drive be necessary because the HDD being cloned is 160 GB (with only about 30 GB used), or would a 64 GB or 128 GB stick suffice?
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Repertition
06-15-2023, 03:40 PM #14

Yes and that's fine with me honestly. I'm just trying to figure out the right size for the space. If I clone it to a USB stick, would a 160 GB drive be necessary because the HDD being cloned is 160 GB (with only about 30 GB used), or would a 64 GB or 128 GB stick suffice?

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DanielEmpire
Posting Freak
781
06-17-2023, 04:38 PM
#15
With the available Linux utilities, the target must be at least 160GB in size.
Using a modern Windows application such as Macrium Reflect, you only require enough available space to accommodate the used space from the source drive.
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DanielEmpire
06-17-2023, 04:38 PM #15

With the available Linux utilities, the target must be at least 160GB in size.
Using a modern Windows application such as Macrium Reflect, you only require enough available space to accommodate the used space from the source drive.

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xXSuperNovaXx
Posting Freak
811
07-01-2023, 07:02 AM
#16
Thanks! It was good to verify everything before you began, and I appreciate the details. I'll check out Macrium and decide if it's worth trying!
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xXSuperNovaXx
07-01-2023, 07:02 AM #16

Thanks! It was good to verify everything before you began, and I appreciate the details. I'll check out Macrium and decide if it's worth trying!

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mccoop03
Posting Freak
910
07-01-2023, 08:44 AM
#17
Macrium offers another choice that uses an Image format instead of a complete clone.
This Image can be assigned a drive letter, allowing you to navigate through its files and storage just as you would with a regular drive or partition.
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mccoop03
07-01-2023, 08:44 AM #17

Macrium offers another choice that uses an Image format instead of a complete clone.
This Image can be assigned a drive letter, allowing you to navigate through its files and storage just as you would with a regular drive or partition.

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