Voyager is a bundle that includes a portable email client, and Private Disk. The latter is used to encrypt the email archive, to make sure no one can read your messages if you lose the disk, or if it ends up being stolen.
Ther are two flavours of Voyager, the 256 MB one and the 2 GB one; no matter which one you have, sooner or later you will need more space. That can be done easily by migrating your email archive to a bigger removable disk.
- It is assumed that both USB flash disks are ready; the original one is E:, and the new one is F:
- Start Private Disk
- Do not mount your image, instead go to Recovery and press Backup, to create a "compressed, encrypted, password protected backup copy of the Private Disk"
- Choose a backup file and an encryption password (this password can be, and should be different from the password of the original image; although nothing will break if you use the same password)
- Create a new encrypted disk, it should be located in F:\image.dpd
- Naturally, the new image must be larger than the original one, so that there is plenty of room for new emails
- The new image should not occupy the flash disk entirely, leave at least 10 MB of space for other data
- Go back to the Recovery tab and press Restore to "restore the data from a previously made copy of the Private Disk"
- Select the destination image (F:\image.dpd) and enter the password
- Choose the backup file made at step #4 and enter its password
- After the process is done, copy all the files and directories (except image.dpd) from E: to F:
If you did everything correctly, you will see the following in F:
- PD, directory
- autorun.inf
- RunMe.exe
- image.dpd
Done!
You will probably want to go through an additional step, and customize these settings of the encrypted image:
- Autorun, to launch Z:\Voyager\Voyager.exe automatically
- Autofinish, to run Z:\Voyager\tbExit.exe automatically when the disk is dismounted
- Disk Firewal - enable it and add the trusted applications (if any) to the white list. Remember that every program inside the virtual disk is trusted by default
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