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To use Sysprep as part of the disk duplication process, the following requirements must be met:

• The master installation and the destination computers must have compatible hardware abstraction layers (HALs). For example, HAL APIC and HAL MPs (multiprocessor systems) are compatible, whereas HAL PIC (Programmable Interrupt Controller) is not compatible with either HAL APIC or HAL MPs.

• The mass–storage controllers (IDE or SCSI) must be identical between the reference and destination computers.

• Plug and Play devices such as modems, sound cards, network cards, video cards, and so on, do not have to be the same. However, any device drivers not included in Drivers.cab should be included in the master installation before you run Sysprep. Alternatively, make sure the uninstalled drivers are available on the destination computer at first run, so Plug and Play can detect and install the drivers.

• Third–party software or disk–duplicating hardware devices are required. These products create binary images of a computer’s hard disk, and they either duplicate the image to another hard disk or store the image in a file on a separate disk.

• The size of the destination computer’s hard disk must be at least the same size as the hard disk of the master installation. If the destination computer has a larger hard disk, the difference is not included in the primary partition. However, you can use the ExtendOemPartition entry in the Sysprep.inf file to extend the primary partition if it was formatted to use the NTFS file system.

Note If the reference and destination computers have different BIOS versions, you should test the process first to ensure success. When using Sysprep for Disk Duplication, Sysprep modifies the local computer Security ID (SID) so that it is unique to each computer.


How to prepare a master installation for cloning
1.
  Install Windows XP on a master computer. As a best practice, Microsoft recommends that Windows XP be installed from a distribution folder by using an answer file to help ensure consistency in configuring the master installation, so that iterative builds can be created and tested more readily. See Unattend.txt for information about automating Windows Setup using an answer file.

2.  Log on to the computer as an administrator.

3. (Optional) Install and customize applications, such as Microsoft Office, Internet Explorer favorite items, and so on.

4. (Optional) Install any device drivers not included in Drivers.cab and not installed by the answer file.

5. (Optional) Run audit tests.

6. (Optional) If you want, create a Sysprep.inf file manually or with the aid of Setup Manager. This file is used to further customize each computer for the user and helps to set the amount of information for which the user will be prompted during Mini–Setup.

7. Run Sysprep.exe. Make sure that both the Sysprep.exe and Setupcl.exe files exist together in the %systemdrive%\Sysprep folder on the local hard disk. When used, the Sysprep.inf also needs to be in the same folder or on a floppy disk that is inserted when the Windows boot menu appears.
- Important: if Setupcl.exe is not in the same directory as Sysprep.exe, Sysprep will not work.

8. If the computer is ACPI–compliant, the computer will shut down by itself. If not, a dialog box appears stating that it is safe to shut down the computer.

9. Take out the system drive and follow the steps for duplicating the system on other computers. You must have special equipment or software for duplicating hard disks.
 

 
 

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Online
The importance of being online
 

In today's competitive market, computer technology can be a great equalizer for small businesses. Businesses that employ technology in a cost-effective manner may find it easier to compete with organizations many times their size due to an increase in productivity. A small organization also may use computer technology and automation to respond in a timely manner to a changing marketplace. Organizations of any size that make poor choices when implementing computer technology will find that they have done much worse than just spend money; they have created a resource-consuming monster. Once this happens, the monster often becomes a permanent fixture in the business; the owners typically feel that they have "invested" in the monster, and therefore must live with it.

Thus, this monster drags the business down twofold: not only does the business suffer because of wasted resources, it also suffers because poor use of technology does not make employees more productive, and in fact can often do just the opposite.

All organizations, whether large or small, must balance the worth of technology against its cost. This balance is especially important to the small businessperson, however. It is easy to become convinced that implementation of technology is the answer to all one's business problems-that somehow a disorganized, poorly defined process will be magically transformed by the right machinery. Computer technology does offer definite benefits, of course, but it is not necessarily an instant solution to a business' problems.

At some point in the 1980s, people stopped asking whether a business had a fax number, and simply started asking what it was. This is quickly becoming true with email addresses as well: electronic mail is becoming a mission-critical means of business communication for many organizations, regardless of size. In its simplest form, email is nothing more than a text message sent from one user to another. The recipient of the message may be within the sender's own organization or anywhere in the world. Email may be used to provide traveling executives or managers with a method of staying in touch with their offices. Email has an advantage over voice communication in that it is not time-dependent; as a sender, I do not have to worry when I send an email message whether the recipient is in their office or capable of communicating with me at the time.

Importance of email

For a small businessperson, the ability to send and receive email 24 hours a day can be extremely important. Many small businesspeople are too busy with current clients during the day to spend time talking to prospective clients and venders on the phone. They may find that they are able to catch up on their correspondence by using email to respond to inquiries during non-business hours.

People who haven't used electronic mail may consider it a very impersonal means of communication. While it certainly is not as personal as meeting someone face to face or talking with them on the phone, it is the most convenient method of communication, and it is generally very reliable. You even can send email messages with a receipt attached, so that you will be informed when the recipient opens the message. Compared to using voicemail, which offers no way to tell whether or when the message was received, this can be very handy.

Electronic mail also is superior to voicemail because a "conversation" or group of messages can easily be stored and tracked. Email can also be used to communicate quickly among a group of people, or to bring someone up to date on a discussion. By comparison, voicemail typically is not easily stored for later retrieval, and also does not allow multiple messages to be easily tracked.

Current email systems have gone far beyond just sending text between users. Email systems such as Microsoft Exchange, Novell GroupWise, Lotus Notes, and Lotus cc:Mail contain integrated calendaring and scheduling features. These features allow a user to invite other users to a meeting, linking their responses to the email system. New add-ons to these packages allow Internet users to check their schedules and email messages as long as they have a connection to the Internet.

Most email systems support some type of forums or bulletin boards, which are public areas used to provide announcements to end users, or to create a discussion-group area regarding a specific topic or project.

Importance of Web presence

Whether by successful marketing or sheer momentum, proponents of the World Wide Web have terrified many business people with the threat that if a business doesn't "get a presence" on the Web, it'll be left behind while its competition takes over the market. Unfortunately, getting a presence on the Web means creating a Web site-which can cost anywhere from a few hundred to thousands of dollars-and taking on an obligation for ongoing maintenance costs.

Before you implement your own Web site, you should spend some time on the Internet taking a look at some of the millions of sites already there. No doubt you'll run into many that seem unwieldy, or completely useless. Keep notes about these sites, especially regarding what you didn't like about them. This is a good way to make sure you won't find yourself making the same mistakes when it's time to design your own site.

Many organizations seem to think that having a Web site will automatically increase their business. This is not necessarily true. The Web may be a good place for advertising and possibly even selling your products, but unless you have a well-known organization, you must make people aware that you have a Web site in the first place. This means placing your Web-site address, or URL, on your business cards, letterhead, and whatever other means you use to advertise your business.

Keep in mind that many potential customers will see your Web site before they ever call you, meet with you, or purchase any products or services. This means that your Web site should reflect the same level of professionalism you would exhibit with other forms of marketing; for example, brochures, letterhead, and business cards.

Leave the publishing to the professionals

Unfortunately, many people have the same attitude toward Web publishing that they had toward desktop publishing in the mid-to-late 1980s; namely, anyone can do it. That attitude resulted in some of the most hideous-looking documents ever published, and now threatens to do the same for Web pages. The desktop-publishing revolution ended with the realization that publishing should be left to professionals. Unfortunately, Web publishing, still in its infancy, has not gotten this far.

Having a Web site doesn't have to cost you a lot of money, however. You don't necessarily need your own onsite Web server or dedicated Internet connection, for example. These options are very expensive, both in terms of initial hardware and setup and in terms of ongoing monthly Internet access and maintenance.

Instead of setting up a Web site from your office, consider using a Web "hotel" service such as those provided by many Internet service providers. ISPs will bill you a monthly storage fee to host your Web site for you. The site does not typically need to be at the same ISP from which you get your email connectivity, so feel free to shop around. The universality of the Web means your site can be hosted from anywhere in the world.

Your Web site should offer potential customers a way to contact you, both electronically and by phone. It is relatively simple to add a "mail-to" form, which allows customers to automatically send electronic mail to your Web site.

You should also be prepared to respond to queries coming from the Web site. Remember that the Internet is worldwide, and that you will most likely begin receiving inquiries from other countries, including many outside your target market. But such information isn't necessarily useless. You may find that these inquiries are useful to your venders, for example, and that by passing the information along you will strengthen your relationships with those venders.

Affordable

Email can be very inexpensive for a small organization to implement. Many application suites and operating systems contain email clients, and many shareware and freeware packages support email from various platforms. Domain names-that is, your company's own email extension, as in "info@yourcompany.com"-are likewise inexpensive to establish. And organizations that do not wish to establish their own Internet connections can still receive email and surf the Web through commercial services such as CompuServe.

If your organization's security requirements preclude transmitting email across the Internet, you can still implement direct email "gateway" connections to your customers and venders. Gateways used to cost a lot of money, and were therefore used only by larger organizations, but today small to medium organizations can afford them too.

Compared to the cost of most other forms of communication, email can be remarkably inexpensive, especially for a small business. If your small organization must communicate regularly with customers and venders, you owe it to yourself to look into the different email alternatives available. Once you have become accustomed to using email, you'll wonder how you ever lived without it.

Small-business owners have many options for becoming connected. Unfortunately, all of these options can make it difficult to decide which one is best for you. Five or six years ago, the computer industry offered only a few ways to solve any given business problem. Today, you might find dozens of solutions. Choosing the one that's best for you requires research. Local user groups, bulletin boards, or Internet newsgroups might be a good place to start. They are often populated with people who have been through the same experience as you.

Cost is of course always a consideration, especially for smaller businesses. The right kind of technology or online presence, however, generally pays for itself.