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Small Typo the on History page

Posted: Wed Apr 10, 2013 1:28 pm
by jwc
Hi Barry, on http://aiscl.co.uk/version_history.php it says:


The is a pre-requisite that the flash drive is formatted as NTFS, see help for details on how to do this as by default it is not possible to format a USB flash drive as NTFS under Windows XP or Windows Server 2003.

should maybe read:

There is a pre-requisite that the flash drive is formatted as NTFS, see help for details on how to do this, as by default it is not possible to format a USB flash drive as NTFS under Windows XP or Windows Server 2003.

Posted: Sat Jun 08, 2013 4:41 pm
by jwc
Or best:

A pre-requisite is that the flash drive is formatted as NTFS, see help for details on how to do this as by default it is not possible to format a USB flash drive as NTFS under Windows XP or Windows Server 2003.

ps- are you still around here, Barry?

NTFS flash drive

Posted: Mon Jun 10, 2013 5:52 pm
by Barry
Yes, I am still here thank you!

Typo's are difficult to spot on words that are smelt correctly ;-)

Your correction has been uploaded along with updates for AISBackup version 3.2.

Barry

Posted: Tue Jun 11, 2013 4:32 pm
by jwc
That's great Barry. I got a question for you though.

I'm still using AISBackup version 2.9.0.400 :D because I use win xp sp2.
Is there any reason to update to the latest version because of my OLD system?

Thanks.

(forgot to add, all backups / restores work perfect with this version)

Upgrade yes or No

Posted: Tue Jun 11, 2013 10:29 pm
by Barry
Yes please upgrade because there are often bug fixes.

AISBackup still even supports NT4, Windows 98 and Windows ME in the latest release. Unfortunately we can no longer test with Windows 95 (but it may still work). Backups of data made on any Windows system with any old version of AISBackup (from the start in the pre-release days of year 2000) can still be restored using the latest version of AISBackup.

In spite of supporting old versions of Windows we support any new technology in more recent versions of Windows, e.g. VSS, NTFS encrypted files etc.

Barry