Your only legitimate source for a modern Norton Ghost that supports UEFI is the (or newer). This enterprise suite includes Ghost64.exe and a UEFI-bootable WinPE environment. But it requires a corporate license.
The spirit of Norton Ghost lives on, but its ghost should finally be laid to rest.
The original ghost.iso files floating around on the internet are strictly BIOS-based. They are not "UEFI aware."
Norton Ghost was originally designed for older BIOS-based systems. Using it on modern UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) hardware requires specific versions and configuration steps, as the legacy "DOS" versions of Ghost generally cannot boot on or properly image UEFI/GPT systems. Essential Requirements
If you must use Ghost, you cannot simply burn an old ISO to a disc. You need a 64-bit environment that supports UEFI booting. : Download Rufus. Select your Norton Ghost ISO.
For IT professionals and system administrators of a certain era, the name evokes a sense of nostalgic reliability. For nearly two decades, Symantec’s Norton Ghost was the gold standard for disk cloning and system imaging. The workflow was simple: boot from a Norton Ghost ISO , capture an image of a perfectly configured hard drive, and deploy it to dozens of identical machines.
Norton Ghost reached its peak popularity during the BIOS (Basic Input/Output System) era. This era utilized the Master Boot Record (MBR) partitioning style. MBR is an older standard that has limitations, such as supporting hard drives only up to 2TB and allowing a maximum of four primary partitions. Ghost was engineered perfectly for this environment. Its bootable ISO loaded a stripped-down version of DOS or Windows PE (Preinstallation Environment) that interacted seamlessly with BIOS and MBR structures.