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Back up for a moment

Years ago I felt like a hypocrite when I urged readers to back up their computers. I didn’t do it very often myself.

In those days - unless you had one of the expensive external mass storage devices available then - back-ups were done on floppy disks. Backing up required feeding floppy disks into the machine as needed, like putting quarters in a slot machine. You had to sit in front of your computer the whole time. It was just too much trouble.

Nowadays, external hard drives are so inexpensive (I just bought a 250 gigabyte model for $100) that there’s really no excuse in failing to back up a computer. Heck, I even do it myself these days.

Today’s software pretty much automates the process. If you buy or own an external hard disk it will have its own back-up software. For instance, the $100 Maxtor One Touch 4 (I just bought it for my wife) has back-up software already loaded.

I recommend using the software that comes with your hard disk - with one exception: I really like the built-in back-up program that comes with Windows Vista. It works seamlessly. Windows XP has back-up software, but it’s not worth the trouble. And if you have the Home Edition of XP, you’ll need to install it from the CD. It does not install automatically when the Home Edition of XP is installed.

So far, this has been pretty simple. Get an external hard disk and use it. If that’s all you do, you’re in pretty good shape.

But for those of you with data that just can’t be replaced - maybe family photos, financial records, or the bookkeeping data for a small business - there are extra steps that lessen the chances of disaster.

Here’s why these extra steps may make sense. If a power surge or lightning strike hits your computer and the external hard disk is attached, odds are both the internal and external drives are gonna get fried. There goes your backup.

At home I use the next layer of protection by disconnecting the external hard disk after it backs up my machine. That’s more work. It means you have to start the backup myself, rather than let the automated software do it. Still, a lighting strike can’t hurt a disconnected external hard disk.

Even that’s not foolproof. If a tornado or a fire destroyed my house, I’d almost certaintly lose both my computer’s internal hard disk and the external one. The way around that: Online backup storage.

You can find several Web sites that store backups. You’d use the external hard disk but also store an extra back-up online. While some of these sites will store small amounts free, you’ll probably end up paying for the storage. I am not going to recommend a specific service since I haven’t used one myself in a while. But you can get a feel by visiting ibackup.com, usdatatrust.com or idrive.com. You can find more with Google.

Perhaps you like the idea of having a backup copy away from your home or business, but - for whatever reason - don’t want to use an online site. There is yet another way. Just buy two external hard disks and use one for a month, then swap it out for the second one for a month. Store the external drive that’s taking the month off with a family member, a trusted friend or at work. That gives you physical offsite storage.

Worst case, if disaster destroys your home, you have data that’s one month old.

Permalink | Comments (5) | Post your comment | Categories: Columns

Comments

By Cynicalgeek

December 7, 2007 11:29 AM | Link to this

I really like to use SyncBack (the freeware version works fine for me) to synchronize files between my USB memory stick and my computers.

I keep “Inbox,” “Outbox,” and “Pending” folders on my Desktop and it’s nice to keep them synchronized (the memory stick has a copy of these folders as well.)

SyncBack will backup/synchronize in just about any method that you can dream up.

By Vince

December 8, 2007 3:02 PM | Link to this

You mentioned that you haven’t checked out any of the online backup services in a while, and it’s clear by the providers you mentioned.

There is a whole new class of these companies making superior products - Mozy (part of EMC now), ElephantDrive (small businesses, and Carbonite (home users) are the three I’m most familiar with. All are pretty good for their respective niches.

By Mandy

December 9, 2007 5:08 AM | Link to this

I started using BOS that was mentioned last month in the TechRepublic blog (free version for home user)This allows me to pick any historical version of my docs or folders when I want to restore. IT’s really more a restoring application but it does automatic and incremental backup. I backup my data to my mother’s home computer over the WAN. Some data I also backup to an external drive, which I keep in the safe when I leave for the weekend. Works great for me. (www.bos.co.il)

By Wayne Gunn

December 10, 2007 12:16 PM | Link to this

I like you, Bill, seldom backed up other than mission critical documents. That is, until I upgraded to MacOS 10.5 Leopard with it’s amazing Time Machine back-up program. It creates an image of everything I tell it to everyday. And, although it does back up everything, what’s amazing is the ability to go to any day, or for that matter just to do a global search for, for a file you’ve misplaced, accidentally erased, or for some reason has recently become corrupted. Time Machine instantly finds the file (via date, title, or even a phrase used in it….!), and then restores it to your desktop immediately…. And, if the boot disk craps out, you boot from the Leopard install disk, locate Time Machine and restore the entire disk in less time than it takes to call the Help desk.

By the it guru

December 11, 2007 9:46 AM | Link to this

HI! we use onlinebackupvault.com they are very fairly priced and their support i beleive to be second to none. Their product is very clear cut and emails back daily reports on the status of the backup- its a true tape replacment solution

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