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In a prior article, we created a system image backup

In this case, you need Rufus for Bootable USB to install Windows 10. (Windows, Linux, UEFI, etc.), you can download ISO of Windows 10 and use in Rufus bootable USB (create bootable USB from iso). In other words, you can say that Rufus provides everything you need to install Windows as bootable USB. Dec 4, 2018 - Looking for a bootable format tool? Here, EaseUS hard disk format utility can boot itself from a USB drive and help you format a hard drive.

An image backup is a complete copy of a hard disk or other media being backed up. The copy is complete in that it can be restored to a completely empty hard drive – as in a replacement hard drive after a failure – and the result is a hard drive that contains everything that the original did.
(Click on the term for full definition.)
'>image backup using the free version of EaseUS Todo. That’s by far the most important first step.

Now it’s time to prepare for the day we might need to restore that image.

It’s time to create an “Emergency Disk”, as EaseUS calls it.

When and why you need an Emergency Disk

There are two common scenarios that require an emergency disk.

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The first is the most obvious: your Hard Disk Drive [HDD]

An HDD, or Hard Disk Drive, is typically a small box inside your computer that holds several metal disks coated with a magnetic material. They are not unlike a video or audio tape or the strip on the back of a credit card. The disk spins at a fairly high rate of speed, and special “heads” can read, or record, a pattern of bits (1s and 0s) on the magnetic surface. Those bits are assembled into bytes, which in turn are the files that you save, receive, or create.
Disks do not lose what’s on them when you turn off the power.
See also: Solid State Disks (SSD)
(Click on the term for full definition.)
'>hard disk fails, and you need to restore your backup
A backup is nothing more than an additional copy of data, ideally kept in a different location than the original.
If there’s only one copy of something – say a photograph on a mobile phone – then it’s not backed up. If that device were to fail or be lost, then the photograph would be lost forever as well.
Computers are excellent at making copies of digital data, and backups are one important use of that functionality.
It’s generally recommended that important data be backed up in at least one, ideally more, separate devices or media, such as an external hard disk. In addition, it’s recommended that critical data also be backed up in another physical location, such as a different building, or online.
More than anything, the important concept is that there never be only a single copy of important data. That’s not backed up.
See also: back up
(Click on the term for full definition.)
'>backup to a replacement hard disk. Since that replacement drive is empty, you don’t have EaseUS Todo installed to process the recovery. In fact, your machine won’t even boot; Windows isn’t on that empty hard drive!

The second scenario is malware [malicious software]

Malware is short for malicious software. Malware is a kind of catchall phrase that encompasses pretty much any kind of software that could cause harm to your data or your machine.
(Click on the term for full definition.)
'>malware, and you want to restore your system to an image backup taken prior to the malware’s arrival. You can’t boot into Windows, since you wouldn’t be able to restore it to its prior state while it’s running; you can’t overwrite a file while it’s being used, and that especially true if the file is part of the operating system itself.

In both cases, as well as a few others, the solution is to boot from something else.

That “something else” is the EaseUS Todo Emergency disk. When you boot from it, it automatically runs a copy of EaseUS Todo you use to locate your backup image and restore that image to your computer’s hard drive.

You can create the emergency disk at the time you need it, but only if you have a separate working system on which to do that. More commonly, you’ll want to create the disk prior to needing it, while your system is working normally. I’ll expand on this below.

Creating an Emergency Disk

Run EaseUS Todo. Click on Tools in the toolbar, and then Create Emergency Disk in the resulting drop-down menu.

You’ll then be shown a dialog box

A dialog box is a window that appears on top of a main application or other window (or occasionally no window at all) requesting user input. Dialog boxes are characterized by one or more input fields, such as edit boxes, check boxes, selection lists and others, an “OK” or equivalent button, and a “Cancel” button. Dialog boxes may or may not have title bars across the top, and while usually movable, they are most often not resizable.
If presented by an application, a dialog box is typically smaller than the application window, so as to appear to be a part of that application.
The term “dialog” refers to the metaphor that the computer is having a conversation or dialog with the user, and is asking for some form of input and processing that input when supplied.
(Click on the term for full definition.)
'>dialog box containing several choices.

There are two selections to make.

Boot disk type determines whether the Emergency Disk should be based on Windows or Linux

Linux is an operating system, just as Microsoft Windows or Apple’s MacOS are operating systems. Operating systems are the software that control the operation of a computer and provide a consistent interface, or API, that programs use to access the features and functionality of the operating system and computer.
(Click on the term for full definition.)
'>Linux. In general, choose Windows (with “Compatibility mode” checked) unless your testing determines that this boot disk doesn’t work for some reason, or you’ve been otherwise instructed by customer support. In general, since your system is already running Windows, the Windows Emergency Disk has the highest probability of just working.

Boot disk location determines what media your disk will be created on.

  • ChooseUSB
    USB is an acronym for Universal Serial Bus, a wired interface that allows multiple various devices to be connected to a computer using a common interface.
    (Click on the term for full definition.)
    '>USB
    if you have a USB thumb drive you can dedicate to this purpose (it’ll be completely erased), and you can configure your machine to boot from USB.
  • Choose CD/DVD if your machine is capable of burning a CD or DVD, and you can configure your machine to boot from CD.
  • Choose Create ISO [ISO image]
    An ISO, typically shorthand for ISO image, is an image of the contents of a CD or DVD disc.
    ISO files are convenient ways to distribute CD and DVD images for download, as they contain every sector that would be present on the original disc, including the boot sectors. When used to distribute software, such as operating system images, the result is that once the ISO image is actually burned to the corresponding media, it is a bootable disc from which that operating system can be installed.
    ISO files are used to distribute more than operating systems, however, and are a common way to distribute anything that would benefit from being provided as a CD or DVD image.
    Technically, ISO files are simply archives or collections of files, much like .zip files, though ISOs are not compressed. As a result, their contents can also be examined and extracted using several common archiving tools, such as 7-zip.
    (Click on the term for full definition.)
    '>ISO
    if your machine can boot from CD or DVD, but doesn’t have the ability to actually burn a CD or DVD. In this case, you need to specify the location into which an “ISO [ISO image]
    An ISO, typically shorthand for ISO image, is an image of the contents of a CD or DVD disc.
    ISO files are convenient ways to distribute CD and DVD images for download, as they contain every sector that would be present on the original disc, including the boot sectors. When used to distribute software, such as operating system images, the result is that once the ISO image is actually burned to the corresponding media, it is a bootable disc from which that operating system can be installed.
    ISO files are used to distribute more than operating systems, however, and are a common way to distribute anything that would benefit from being provided as a CD or DVD image.
    Technically, ISO files are simply archives or collections of files, much like .zip files, though ISOs are not compressed. As a result, their contents can also be examined and extracted using several common archiving tools, such as 7-zip.
    (Click on the term for full definition.)
    '>iso” file will be created. You then take this ISO to another machine that has a CD or DVD burner to actually create the media.

Once you’ve made selections appropriate to your situation, click on Proceed.

After a short period of time, the process completes and the emergency disk is ready.

When to create your emergency disk, or …

There are two schools of thought as to when you need to actually create your Emergency disk.

Create it before you need it. This is important if you have no other computer available from which to make the emergency disk in an actual emergency. You’ll need to have it ready to go so you can simply boot from it and deal with whatever the crisis happens to be.

Technically, you should only need to create the emergency disk once. However, there are strong arguments for creating a new one each time EaseUS Todo is updated. I recommend doing so at least for major version updates, to ensure compatibility with the backup software, as well as to address any issues that are updated in the emergency disk itself.

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Only create it when you need it. This works if you have another working machine from which to create the emergency disk. The emergency disk does not need to be created on the same machine you’ve been backing up, or on the machine to which you plan to restore — any Windows PC will do.

If you plan to create it when needed, I do recommend that when that time comes, you download the latest version of EaseUS Todo Free, so as to get the latest version of the emergency disk.

My actual recommendation is that you do both: create one now, test it, and then save it in a safe location in case you need it. Then, when the time comes, you have the option of using that, or, if you can, download the latest and burn a new, more up-to-date emergency disk.

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This article is included in my book, Backing Up In Windows 10, available now. Top-to-bottom, end-to-end, Backing Up In Windows 10 will walk you through all the steps you need to keep your data safe, using Windows 10’s built in tools, as well as a free alternative.

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