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Computer Back-up
Quick question - how is everyone here backing up the material on their computers?
My laptop just recovered from the blue screen of death. Terrified that it would not restart. No restart means all the stuff on the hard drive is unavailable. I'd be very interested to learn the options you've all selected to avoid this potential disaster. |
I have a backup server that polls a number of my users' machines. As external drives become cheaper and operating systems now come with built-in backup software, we don't have near as many machines using my backup services. The Win 7 backup routine works fine. My Apple users, of course, run Time Machine. External drives come with their own back-up software so you have a number of options.
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I use an 2 Tb external HDD that automatically backs up all of the computers in my house each week.
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You want continuous and off site. I use Carbonite. You can access your backed up files remotely with a droid or app.
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My /home partition lives on a RAID-1 array. Once in a blue moon, I'll back up /etc (most system settings), dump a list of installed packages, and keep 'em in my home directory. Assuming I have replacement parts, I've had a machine let the magic smoke out and I was back up and running with all data intact in just under 30 minutes.
Nothing I have is worth an off site backup, with a few exceptions and those get stored in a few places... |
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Our Primary server is RAID backs itself up every night to another drive. My plan is to have some other files in an offsite place as well. But I don't want to send 50GB each day. |
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I don't bother with backing up the OS & applications. I keep all my personal files organized under a single folder (my laptop) or second drive (workstation). It will have folders for mainly static stuff (music/pictures/etc...) and folders for dynamic stuff (docs/development code). Every week or so I plug in a USB drive and copy the dynamic folders over. The static stuff (much larger) gets copied only when it was modified locally. Easy to mange and OS neutral - I do this across PC/Linux/Mac.
All of this means nothing if all the backup devices are lost in a home fire or theft. Cloud backup will become the norm in just a few more years. For your super critical files it makes sense today. |
I let the mac to a daily backup to "Time machine" on an external drive. Once every couple of months, I rotate that external drive with another sitting in a safe deposit box at the bank.
Backups at home do you no good when the place burns to the ground or gets broken into... and I'm not comfortable with backing up to the cloud, sooner or later someone will break into whatever storage you are using and it's like public domain out there ;-) |
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Data security in the Cloud is a BIG DEAL. Vendors know this and spend lots of money making sure they get it right. I recently saw a quote stating that if enterprise is not spending at least $100K/yr on data security then their data would be more secure with a Cloud based solution.
Not really mainstream yet but fears of data compromise are overstated. YMMV. |
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I looked into various network attached storage sloutions to backup routinely. I never found something that I wanted to risk getting frustrated with. I'm putting more stuff on Google Docs, but mostly for access from other locations. I have an external drive but quit the manual stuff after if filled up with all the interval backup stuff I never used. I wiped it and started over and just add picture backups.
I would like to know more specifics on what is recommended for NAS with a RAID array that sits below the $250 price point. There were some before that nearly met my frustration free desires but reviews were mixed. I would also like to go with a Solid State drive for op system and other programs, but never got the feeling that the software to set it up was simplified. I built this PC (i5 W7) and I don't want to do it again until it needs it! |
For my Mac, I use a 3TB external drive and Time Machine.
However, beware - I once had a disk fail, then had trouble restoring to the new drive using Time Machine. Like, serious trouble. So, every couple of months, I also do a complete disk clone with Carbon Copy Cloner, and I keep that external HDD offsite. |
both the Mac and Win 7 have auto backup facilities built in - you just attach a big ext. HDD and let 'er rip
there is another thread on this in OT and I think I posted a link to the Win 7 how to |
I have Windows Home Server running on an old Dell with 2GB of RAM and 5x2TB hard drives for 10TB of storage. Every PC in the house gets a full disk image and is incrementally backed up every day. Very easy to setup, use and restore! All of our data (music, videos and photos are stored on the server. Every file is stored on 2 separate hard drives in case 1 hard drive dies.
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the problem is that a house fire etc. will destroy it all - that is why people use off-site backups
however, even off-site backups are no good if the Cylons attack |
I just drag and drop user info only on an external drive i.e.. documents, audio, pictures, movies, etc.
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