Nortonghost115corporatedosbootcdiso Full 🆒 🆓
For those with a legal copy of Norton Ghost 11.5 Corporate Edition:
But even then, for most modern use cases, Clonezilla is easier and safer.
Clonezilla Live (the bootable CD/USB version) directly replaces what people wanted from the Ghost DOS boot CD: nortonghost115corporatedosbootcdiso full
If your goal is to clone or backup a drive without an OS running, Clonezilla is the ethical, safe, and superior choice.
| Feature | Details | |---------|---------| | Imaging | Create .GHO / .GHS (splitted) images of FAT, NTFS, ext2/3 partitions | | Clone | Disk-to-disk, partition-to-partition, disk-to-image, image-to-disk | | Compression | None / Fast / High | | Network | Peer-to-peer TCP/IP, NetBIOS, multicast (GhostCast) | | Drives | IDE, SATA (in legacy mode), SCSI, USB (with DOS drivers) | | File system | Reads/writes NTFS (limited defragmentation handling) | | Sector-based | Works with any OS (Linux, BSD, even unknown FS) | For those with a legal copy of Norton Ghost 11
Sometimes, when downloaded, the file extension is changed to .full or removed to prevent deletion by antivirus software.
Cybercriminals know that ghost.exe is often run with admin/root privileges (to access disks). A malicious version could: Test thoroughly on legacy hardware first
Many such ISOs on torrent sites, archive.org “abandonware” collections, or obscure forums have been modified without disclosure.
Norton Ghost has been succeeded by other Symantec/Norton tools like Norton Save & Restore and then by Acronis-based solutions. If you're looking for similar functionality, consider exploring modern backup and imaging solutions like Acronis True Image, Macrium Reflect, or others that offer more compatibility with current hardware and operating systems.
Not directly. DOS has limited USB 1.1/2.0 support via third-party drivers (e.g., DUSE, ASPI). Better to boot the ISO from a CD/DVD or use Plop Boot Manager to redirect to USB – but this is fragile. Modern tools handle USB boot natively.





