Quote Originally Posted by Jeremy View Post
The only way I can see around this is to have your third-party backup software save images to a separate hard-drive (a back-up drive that does not have your OS installed on it), then re-install windows and the third-party backup program, then finally use the third-party program to restore your computer to the way it was before the failure.
Jeremy, you make a highly astute point. I've seen some backup programs that don't offer a way to do a "bare-metal restore" and wondered What Are They Thinking?

Now, if it's just a file & folder backup program that makes it dead simple to backup your precious data... that's one thing. And I strongly encourage people to get something that will do that at the very least. If disaster strikes, they haven't lost the stuff that truly irreplaceable. I've seen the looks of horror on people's faces when hard drive failure or Windows will no longer boot happens. It isn't pretty.

As for myself, I separate my user data from the system drive and I use a full-blown imaging program: Acronis TrueImage. And I only do "cold images": I simply don't trust images made when Windows is running. (One day I'll bite the bullet and pay the $90 to get ShadowProtect: it's Enterprise level app that creates reliable "hot images.") And, of course, the images are saved to a large data drive and then copied to an external drive for further insurance in case of hardware failure, malware attack or OS snafu.

However, most people's eyes glaze over when you start talking about "partitions" & "imaging."