On Thu, Dec 16, 2004 at 10:08:18PM +1100, Cedric Pradalier wrote:
> The funny thing is that the firewire mode is one of the last thing
> that standed when my ibook broke its motherboard (second time)... And
> it was stable enough to backup ~10Go.
I've always wondered whether or not the FireWire ta
According to Michael Schmitz, on Thu, 16 Dec 2004 11:30:01 +0100 (CET),
>> >> a) If I connect two macs, can I just read from the second scsi
>> >> device from the first mac and write to the second scsi device
>> >> from the second mac?
>> >
>> >That's the plan. You won't be able to do a raw
> >>a) If I connect two macs, can I just read from the second scsi
> >>device from the first mac and write to the second scsi device
> >>from the second mac?
> >
> >That's the plan. You won't be able to do a raw copy (image copy of the
> >whole disk or single partitions) that way, just
According to Michael Schmitz, on Wed, 15 Dec 2004 13:40:30 +0100 (CET),
>> When I connect a mac in firewire mode to the Vaio, two "scsi" disks
>> appear: a small one with 3 partitions and a large (80G) one with 10.
>> The second one is obviously the actual hard disk but I'm curious to know
>>
>>
> When I connect a mac in firewire mode to the Vaio, two "scsi" disks
> appear: a small one with 3 partitions and a large (80G) one with 10.
> The second one is obviously the actual hard disk but I'm curious to know
>
> a) If I connect two macs, can I just read from the second scsi
> de
I want to clone the disk in one albook onto another. I'd like to do
this by putting both the macs into Firewire mode and using a third
laptop (A Vaio running 2.6, fwiw) to read from one disk and write to the
other.
When I connect a mac in firewire mode to the Vaio, two "scsi" disks
appear: a smal
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