Got new hardware? Archive those driver discs!
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How many times have you tried to sell or reinstall a piece of hardware such as a digital camera, sound card, or other peripheral and can’t find the driver disc? Or, is your desk drawer cluttered with a wide assortment of discs that you will probably never use any time soon?
It’s time you cleaned up that clutter and consolidate your OEM software and driver discs by archiving them.
While it is true that there are a lot of sites that offer hard-to-find drivers, you should know that using them is ‘at your own risk’ and quite unofficial. Additionally, there are often trimmed-down OEM software discs that come with the hardware which you just can’t download freely (at least not legally!) from the manufacturer’s website.
Consolidate your discs!
Here’s something that I’ve started to do any time I get a new piece of hardware: Make an ISO backup of the discs that come with the hardware. If you have the drive space available, save each ISO to a folder on your drive, or, copy them onto a single DVD. That way, even if you can’t find the installation media when you decide to sell or reinstall the device later on, you can still go back and use the software that came with it.
Most driver discs hardly use the capacity of the CD that they come on, so you could feasibly fit quite a large number of them on a single 4.7Gb DVD.
How to archive to ISO?
Practically all of the major CD burning programs such as Roxio, Sonic, and Nero offer the ability to create ISO images from CD/DVD’s, but a super quick and easy way (and free!) to accomplish this is by using a tool like LC ISO Creator. Once you’ve archived them, then check out Tim’s earlier post regarding ways to read ISO files as a virtual drive letter if you need to access them later on.
…and beyond…
Of course, archiving isn’t limited to just your OEM and driver discs. If you are ambitious enough, backup the rest of your discs as well…One thing to note is that some discs (games are notorious for obvious reasons) are burned with a copy protection algorithm that makes it downright near impossible to generate an ISO backup or copy with most out-of-the-box tools.
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4 Responses to “Got new hardware? Archive those driver discs!”
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Dave Says:
July 18th, 2007 at 8:25 amEven better than ISO - simply store the contents of the CD’s in Zip files. Storing as ISO is inconvenient (you need an ISO reader later) and only necessary for bootable discs or software that uses some form of CD check.
Personally I have a mirrored drive set for my storage, working on moving to a RAID setup of SATA drives.
I keep a Software folder and a drivers folder on my storage drives. Any driver I ever stumble across (friends machine rebuild, etc) gets copied. My drivers folder is organized - folders for System Drivers (with sub folders for each system/motherboard), and then folders for each type of device. I use the Brand/Model for the folder name, and add a text file inside the folder for any goofy details I discover.
ALL files get zipped, with medium-to-high compression, and are self-extracting. This minimizes my archive footprint and makes it easier to carry multiple drivers on a flash drive if I need to go visit someone.
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Rob Dunn Says:
July 18th, 2007 at 9:44 amDave - great tips! The only thing that worries me about not doing an ISO image is that sometimes software installations will do a volume check on the disc it is being installed from, but otherwise, your method should work in 99% of the cases (especially with driver discs!).
Rob
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Dave Says:
July 18th, 2007 at 10:25 am@Rob
Agreed - some software requires a CD check, but I’ve never come across a *driver* that does.That being said, I DO keep ISO’s for certain things. All my OS CD’s/DVD’s have been saved as ISO files, along with any software that has a cd/volume check. This enables me to re-create the discs as needed (I’ve lost or scratched many OS discs). These are also on the same mirrored drive set.
ISO Buster (www.isobuster.com) is perfect for this-it smoothly extracts the image from a cd and saves it as an ISO. Then you can burn it with your favorite burning software (my fav is nero www.nero.com)
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Ralph Says:
July 18th, 2007 at 2:41 pm -
It’s all Hard Says:
November 11th, 2007 at 3:38 pmto sell or reinstall a piece of hardware such as a digital camera, sound card, or other peripheral and can’t find the driver disc? Or, is your desk drawer cluttered with a wide assortment of discs that you will probably never use any time soon?read more| digg story
