Ghost 11 5 Exe Dos Downloads
Which version of Ghost? If you are talking 8.0 corporate or at least a version of Ghost that has the Ghost32.exe executable I can point you in a direction that you can set up a bootable CD with a version of XP (yes, running XP from a CD) that you can then run Ghost from. The issue you are going to have with USB keys is that the only systems I know will boot from the things right now is Dell, and that is because they are on a crusade to kill the floppy. I don't know of any other system BIOS' that will boot from a USB key (and believe me, I have looked).

Drive daniel pink ebook download free. I formated my JumpDrive 128MB under Windows 98SE, bootable of course. Copied ghost.exe over with a mouse driver. Boots fine on my boxes (AOpen 865 mobo and Shuttle SB51). I just set it up to boot USB floppy. Works everytime. That is if the BIOS supports it. My other favorite option is a bootable minicd.
Toss on it the basics like Partition Magic, F-Prot AntiVirus and Ghost. I'm going to try some bootable minidvds (like from the Sony DVD camcorder) since most of the systems I work with have DVDROM drives. Toss on the whole two CD Slackware install or Windows XP install. Ghost 2002 runs from DOS - all you need is the GHOSTPE.EXE in any drive path accessible from the DOS prompt i.e. You certainly don't need to be running the special Norton PC-DOS environment.
My suggestion: 1) Download a Win98 bootdisk floppy imagefrom 2) Download a DOS driver for your USB memory stick (could be tricky, this bit). 3) Use Winimage to extract and edit the CONFIG.SYS and AUTOEXEC.BAT on that 98 boot image to include the USB stick drivers in the boot sequence. Now you have a bootable floppy image that should mount the USB stick, as well as the CD drivers, if required. 4) Incorporate the bootable floppy image into your bootable USB memory stick - this is the bit I'm really not clear on, but surely to Christ somebody has solved this problem by now. All you need now is GHOSTPE.EXE on the memory stick.
Ghost 11 5 Exe Dos Downloads Windows 7
The stick boots from the floppy image, mounts itself as a drive and GHOSTPE.EXE is accessible from the DOS prompt. This method works just fine from a CDR:- Provided that some DOS driver exists for the memory stick, I can't see any reason why it shouldn't work there either. I'll be very interested to see how this thread goes.