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How to use Active@ Disc Imager to back up Linux Ubuntu computer

FOLLOW THESE INSTRUCTIONS AT YOUR OWN RISK. NO LIABILITY ACCEPTED FOR LOSS OF DATA FROM FOLLOWING THESE INSTRUCTIONS.

Yes — you can use an Active@ Disk Image USB pendrive on an Ubuntu machine, but with a few important points:

✔️ What does work

Active@ Disk Image includes a bootable WinPE-based rescue media.
If your USB stick was created with their Boot Disk Creator, you can usually:

  1. Plug it into your Ubuntu system
  2. Boot the computer from that USB stick
  3. Use the Active@ environment to make a full disk image of your Linux drive (it works at the block level, so it doesn’t care that the OS is Ubuntu)

This creates a sector-by-sector backup, which is perfectly valid for Linux systems.

⚠️ What to watch out for

  • You must boot into the Active@ environment, not run it inside Linux (there’s no native Linux version of Active@ Disk Image).
  • If your drive uses LUKS encryption, you will have to decrypt it first or back it up as raw sectors.
  • If your machine uses UEFI + Secure Boot, you may need to temporarily disable Secure Boot so the USB can load the WinPE environment.

✔️ Alternatives that run natively in Ubuntu (just in case)

If you’d prefer something Linux-native, these work well:

  • Clonezilla
  • Redo Rescue
  • dd (raw clone)
  • Timeshift (system snapshots — not a full image)
  • fsarchiver for filesystem-level backups

Summary

Yes: You can use the Active@ Disk Image USB boot drive to back up an Ubuntu system, because the backup is done outside the OS and works at the disk-image level.

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