Posted: Fri Jul 25, 2008 11:17 pm
Find Mike a violin piece on http://www.efiddler.com/loops.htm !
I too am an Acronis fan - and I usually do incremental backups which I set going when I am about to go out for an hour or two so I don't know how long they take. Every couple of months I will connect a different stand-alone hard drive and do a complete backup overnight.
For those who have not investigated the field, Acronis is a system which effectively takes a snapshot of your working disc in every detail. Thus should your main disc drive die, you can simply fit a new one and restore everything - programs, data, emails etc exactly as it was. That is much easier and faster than making a fresh installation of Windows and re-installing all your programs one by one then copying data files from a backup store.
BUT does anyone go that extra step and make backups for storing off-site? If - God forbid - your house burned down, would you lose all the computer data? There are now companies which let you store backups remotely - sending files to and from over the net. Any sensible business has systems of backup discs which means some copies are always stored in a distant place. I know no private householders who do that.
Dave
I too am an Acronis fan - and I usually do incremental backups which I set going when I am about to go out for an hour or two so I don't know how long they take. Every couple of months I will connect a different stand-alone hard drive and do a complete backup overnight.
For those who have not investigated the field, Acronis is a system which effectively takes a snapshot of your working disc in every detail. Thus should your main disc drive die, you can simply fit a new one and restore everything - programs, data, emails etc exactly as it was. That is much easier and faster than making a fresh installation of Windows and re-installing all your programs one by one then copying data files from a backup store.
BUT does anyone go that extra step and make backups for storing off-site? If - God forbid - your house burned down, would you lose all the computer data? There are now companies which let you store backups remotely - sending files to and from over the net. Any sensible business has systems of backup discs which means some copies are always stored in a distant place. I know no private householders who do that.
Dave