Let’s be honest—modern backup tools are great. But for those of us who grew up in the Windows XP and early Vista era, there was only one king of bare-metal restore: .
✅ – Ghost 11.5 introduced better support for multi-core CPUs, making image creation/deployment noticeably faster than 11.0.
Here’s a social media / blog-style post for , tailored for a tech audience that remembers (or still uses) legacy imaging tools. Title: The Legendary Disk Cloner That Refuses to Die: Norton Ghost 11.5 norton ghost 11.5
Rest in peace, Ghost. 👻 You earned your retirement. #NortonGhost #LegacyTech #DiskImaging #SysAdminLife #VintageComputing
✅ – You could run it from a floppy, USB, or PXE boot. No bloat. No cloud required. Just raw sector-based imaging. Let’s be honest—modern backup tools are great
✅ – One small executable. One command line. You could automate whole lab deployments with a simple batch file.
✅ – Need to move a Windows 7 or XP machine to completely different hardware? Ghost 11.5’s -fdsp switch and HAL handling made it possible long before “universal restore” was a buzzword. Here’s a social media / blog-style post for
It doesn’t natively support UEFI or GPT disks. And forget about incremental forever or cloud backup. Ghost 11.5 is a tool from 2008—but for legacy systems, industrial PCs, or vintage computing projects, nothing else works quite as reliably.