tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9518042.post4550930006489476876..comments2024-03-19T07:46:20.437-05:00Comments on Windows Incident Response: More Free ToolsUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9518042.post-14223811369291544412008-05-26T08:18:00.000-05:002008-05-26T08:18:00.000-05:00Harlan,Thanks for mentioning me in the update.Afte...Harlan,<BR/><BR/>Thanks for mentioning me in the update.<BR/><BR/>After some lawn-cutting duty I have to do an update to that post on Evidence Collector. It works 100% great after all on XP Home. Turns out (and this came to me as I was watching the "Meerkat Manor" movie last night) that I had been running it on my work machine from my second partition (not the system partition). On my home system it was sitting on my C: So I moved it to my D: and ran it. Worked perfectly. Folks running it from USB shouldn't encounter that "problem".<BR/><BR/>That's not really clear in the release notes so I plan to do an update on the post pointing that out. Makes sense however as you <I>might</I> not want to be dumping log data directly onto the HDD you are attempting to anyalyze ;)<BR/><BR/>I bookmarked the nabiy website myself. He has a lot of resources that look like they are worth exploring under his "links" page.<BR/><BR/>It was a bit of a challenge hunting down a few of those applications but that's part of the fun!<BR/><BR/>And in doing so, turn up more gems.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com