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I used Carbonite for a couple of years, but on two occasions when I needed to restore relatively small amounts of data, the restore went unbelievably slowly - to the extent that I could not imagine trying to recover from a real disaster that way. I now use Acronis (which seems to be much more reliable and stable than it was up to a couple of years ago) for local backup, mainly of system files, to a NAS device, and CrashPlan Pro for continuous backup of documents and data. I have been very impressed with the latter program - occasional problems have been dealt with promptly by support people who know their product and care about their users.
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I use the R, because the D makes it go forward, and the P doesn't work on my machine.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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too early in the morning for this. btw, "R" is for rocket mode.
Charlie Gilley
<italic>Stuck in a dysfunctional matrix from which I must escape...
"Where liberty dwells, there is my country." B. Franklin, 1783
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
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I'm assuming you want to make 1:1 image of at least your C drive - i.e. if anything goes wrong you just want to either have it already on a drive or be able to restore an older image. For this I've used CloneZilla several years now. Many a time I screwed up an installation by fiddling with drivers and settings, and many times screwed up partitioning and/or dual-booting. If it wasn't for CloneZilla I'd have had to euthanize myself long ago. I've seen others mention stuff like Arconis. AFAIK they all do pretty much the same job as CZ. Either make a raw copy of one drive to another, or to an image file for later restore (either entire drive or per partition).
For your other drives I'd just go with a normal copying backup. Yes (as many other answers state) online stuff (like OneDrive / Dropbox / GDrive / etc.) can help, but depending on size you may not be able to use these. Probably OK for the development project files - they tend to be smallish and don't often change all at once. Although for coding I've found these auto-online-sync stuff tends to screw with the editor / IDE as the timing of the sync gets "out-of-sync" making the editor / IDE think the file's changed from outside. It would be very cumbersome for your VMs though - since all the VM virtual drives would change nearly every time you run them, meaning a near 100% upload on a daily basis (hope your bandwidth is large and fast enough).
I would likely rather just go with a local copy (at least for your E drive). To be absolutely sure, a rotating copy on 3 drives - overwriting the older backup. There are many programs which can do this on a scheduled basis, some even on an event basis as a file changes (i.e. the way OneDrive / DropBox works, only instead of to an online server, to a local path you specify). You could even setup a task schedule in Windows to perform the copy, though I'd likely go with RoboCopy instead of copy/xcopy.
Personally I use rclone on my NAS box, using DeltaCopy in Windows to backup onto the NAS. Then I've got a script on there firing when I plug in a USB drive - which simply copies the backup from the NAS's internals to the external (overwriting only newer files). But that's me - on my home LAN, and since nearly all my project files (3d models) tend to be huge (even in relation to video files) - nothing strange to see several GB per file (i.e. similar in size to your VM files).
For your D drive I might be tempted to use a versioning system. Even a local background service running something like SVN should be awesome in relation to just a copy. Though if you also use something like Git it may start interfering with one another. I'd advise you choose one of these anyway, it's a whole lot nicer to be able to recover any version of your code at any time - even years later. And since most of these save differences only - the size is minimal. Actually, I'd advise going with this as online instead of something like OneDrive (if you're willing to share your code use something like GitHub, if not look at Bitbucket or similar). You could do it in combination, though they'd not give more security than you'd get out of a versioning system (actually a LOT less).
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Very old school here:
Robocopy: incremental copies of working files
Macrium Reflect: occasional system images
Software Zen: delete this;
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18.4.2017
I have used Acronis's True Image for regular weekly backup of my HDD's, and use xcopy/robocopy for backups of fast changing data to an USB Drive.
Since I also use Thunderbird and Firefox I use Mozbackup (Well, I wrote a bash that does it all automatically) to backup emails etc twice a day....that was a real saver when I deleted a large chunk of my current emails.
Hope this helps.
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I have used SyncBackFree for years for file backup and never had a problem with back or recovery. The paid version can do versioning of backups. I use EaseUS TodoBackup Free for disk imaging--it's remarkably quick (but I have not tested recovery, probably like most folks).
NTI BackupEZ came with a soap-on-a-rope Toshiba USB drive and I used that for almost a year. It was slow-w-w-w and never ran without errors when doing file/directory backup. It was horrible to uninstall. CCleaner, IObit Uninstaller & Control Panel could not uninstall it. I was able to download a MS tool to expunge it. You have been warned.
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Imaging: Macrium Reflect is my preference for Imaging. Also allows for incremental and other options.
VMWare: Robocopy only to an 8TB external drive.
Code: Network storage, and above drive. Far quicker.
I used to use Cobian Backup for a lot of stuff. It allows for zip or direct copies. Looks like the author has sold it however.
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I used Cobian for years to backup to external drives that I would rotate through. It does direct copy, which is nice for retrieval and compatibility, but was slow doing full backup sets.
I've since switched to CrashPlan about a year ago. I use CrashPlan for both cloud backup and local backup. While initial cloud backup can take a while, it's much faster afterwards, and also keeps file history so you can get old versions of files easily. The same software for online backup is also used for local backup to a NAS drive (mirrored) for the "golden 3-2-1" backup rule. (3 backup copies of data, 2 onsite and 1 off-site).
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Veeam endpoint backup is free and creates image and bootable CD to make full recovery easier including drivers. It does incremental on schedule keeping configurable number of daily versions available. Individual file restore easily accomplished.
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First I treat systems files differently from data . I ALWAYS have at least 2 drives - at least C and D - C is ALWAYS SYSTEM ONLY and data on D and up - NO DATA IS ALLOWED ON C!
I always make data on my RAMDRIVE and back it up as soon as I am done with BATch files that put it in 5 different places on my PC and on my network. I also have BATch files using ROBOCOPY to SYNC UP detachable back-up media like USB sticks or drives.
For system back up I use FARSTONE Total Recovery Tools - and simply wouldn't use anything else. It boots to its own OS from its own media (I use USB stick) and thus does a system backup free from windoze interference.
Works for me.
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Two layers.
1. Deepsoftware's StorageCraft - Backup of the c:\ drive, including boot sector. Backup of the D:\, E: & F:\ drives. Does a full backup every Sunday and incremental backups every 3 hours the PC is turned on. Backup 'files' are held on a NAS. I have a boot CD & thumb drive in case of the unthinkable.
2. AJC's Active Backup - Real time backup of the D:\, E:\ & F:\ files as the are saved after being changed in some manner. This supplements the StorageCraft's backups. Backup files are held on a separate SSD.
HTH Regards,
Ian
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NovaBackup for file backups (dev source, etc). Use an external drive and keep 7 days' backups. Cobian backup for VMs. I can't say enough good about Cobian: it's free and uses ZIP format for the archives, so any unZIPPER can restore files. It has a very decent user interface, can be scheduled or run manually, and can run scripts either before or after a job. And, an entire backup job or set of jobs can be scripted. Again, I run a 7-day backup cycle to an external hard drive. For SQL server, I use the native SQL backup engine and run scheduled SQL backup jobs. The backup files can then be archived with any backup tool, including OneDrive or Dropbox.
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Acronis
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Google Rolls Out 'Fact Check' Tool to Combat Fake News Worldwide[^]
Thank you google. A website telling us which website has real news and which does not. This should be interesting. I think we are nearing the point where the definition of 'fact' will need to be changed to mean "any piece of information believed to be true by the majority."
There are two kinds of people in the world: those who can extrapolate from incomplete data.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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Take it to the soapbox. Don't need your personal attacks here.
#SupportHeForShe
Government can give you nothing but what it takes from somebody else. A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take everything you've got, including your freedom.-Ezra Taft Benson
You must accept 1 of 2 basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe or we are not alone. Either way, the implications are staggering!-Wernher von Braun
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Take it to the soapbox. Not interested in your diatribe.
#SupportHeForShe
Government can give you nothing but what it takes from somebody else. A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take everything you've got, including your freedom.-Ezra Taft Benson
You must accept 1 of 2 basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe or we are not alone. Either way, the implications are staggering!-Wernher von Braun
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Because it actually complies with the rules. You don't. And your claim about the OP is an assumption based on your own biases.
#SupportHeForShe
Government can give you nothing but what it takes from somebody else. A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take everything you've got, including your freedom.-Ezra Taft Benson
You must accept 1 of 2 basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe or we are not alone. Either way, the implications are staggering!-Wernher von Braun
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N_tro_P wrote: No it doesn't. Your claims are without merit. He made a post that is about a company, an IT company and one of it's features. There is no flaming, there is no politics, there is no other thing that is prohibited by the rules as posted here[^]
You on the other hand, have violated several of them. Name that of no flaming, no poltics or religion, no personal attacks, no trolling.
N_tro_P wrote: He himself is a troll That is your personal opinion and is irrelevant in the instant case.
N_tro_P wrote: posted this as his typical trolling behavior I see nothing trolling in the OP. You however are trolling.
N_tro_P wrote: He in no way complies with the rules of CP LMAO. Actually, he does. The rules in Soapbox-1 are a bit different than in the lounge and other CP forums. I have seen you however become extremely personal, irate and attacking.
N_tro_P wrote: He in no way complies with the rules of CP and should be removed for the betterment of the community. Maybe it is you that should remove yourself for our betterment.
#SupportHeForShe
Government can give you nothing but what it takes from somebody else. A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take everything you've got, including your freedom.-Ezra Taft Benson
You must accept 1 of 2 basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe or we are not alone. Either way, the implications are staggering!-Wernher von Braun
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