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OT online back up
"Dave LaCourse" wrote in message ... On Mon, 05 May 2008 14:53:07 GMT, "Larry L" wrote: the idea that ALL his stuff could get stolen is why I wondered about online storage ... Carbonite, Larry. Accessable wherever you are. Complete electronic backup. That does look good, Dave ..... though I admit to a bit of worry about ANY program that " works quietly and continuously in the background" I've encountered a few making a similar claim that sometimes got very noisy and obnoxious |
OT online back up
On Mon, 05 May 2008 14:53:07 GMT, "Larry L"
wrote: wrote in message In any case, don't pack all of your backup media in the same piece of luggage... the idea that ALL his stuff could get stolen is why I wondered about online storage ... He's an aspiring writer and by the time he heads home his laptop will contain hundreds of hours of work, not so much "sensitive' stuff as just plain work. Since it's all text and small files I had him install an FTP client and gave him a pw-protected folder on my web site where he can upload those files. We're more concerned about theft than drive failure, but I'll give him an external drive for a trip present. I have a Maxtor that comes with 'ghost-like' cloning software that stores an image of the entire HD in case of drive failure and also has pretty cool software for syncing two machines, if you work on the same files on both, and simple back-up of defined folders too. It's physically small and light weight, combined with FTPing his most precious stuff to the website it will cover most threats, stored seperately from the laptop A (physically) small flash drive or two might be a better _traveling_ gift than an external HD (but if you do get him one, remember that he may need an extra plug adaptor set) and since the files are text, it's unlikely that he'd ever fill a flash up. Some seem to forget that while a remote BU service is, technically, ready to be accessed from anywhere, having that access _from_ anywhere isn't guaranteed. In certain cases, one might not want to access anything - for example, I'd not recommend a US citizen access such a service from Cuba, regardless of the ability to do so. Then, in certain areas of China, it might be impossible to access it. IMO, I'd look at remote BU as a redundant BU rather than a primary, esp. in the case of traveling. TC, R thanks all for the input |
OT online back up
On Mon, 05 May 2008 15:51:54 GMT, "Larry L"
wrote: "Dave LaCourse" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 05 May 2008 14:53:07 GMT, "Larry L" wrote: the idea that ALL his stuff could get stolen is why I wondered about online storage ... Carbonite, Larry. Accessable wherever you are. Complete electronic backup. That does look good, Dave ..... though I admit to a bit of worry about ANY program that " works quietly and continuously in the background" I've encountered a few making a similar claim that sometimes got very noisy and obnoxious If this is a full backup scheme/system/service, it has a big plus and a big minus - if something goes big-time wrong, you got everything, but if one important file gets whacked, you might HAVE to get everything...and I'd offer that if it works "continuously," the connection must be "continuous" for a least-resources-possible operation (and if the connection isn't continuous, having the BU data stored in a local cache ain't gonna help a whole hell of a lot in the event of theft or HW failure...). HTH, R |
OT online back up
On May 5, 9:51 am, "Larry L" wrote:
That does look good, Dave ..... though I admit to a bit of worry about ANY program that " works quietly and continuously in the background" I've encountered a few making a similar claim that sometimes got very noisy and obnoxious Carbonite looks very nice. I may recommend it to family and friends. I do, however, resonate with some of Larry's hesitations. I'm a geek and I like to set up and control my technical environment. Larry, you set up an FTP server, so you must be technically capable. Did you do this on Unix? If so, a very nice alternative solution would be to set up a Subversion server. This would not only back up your son's file's but also keep a change history in case he wants to access older versions. And there are some nice Windows clients for Subversion available. http://subversion.tigris.org/ This may be a bit more technical than you or your son want to get, but it's a nice system. That said, FTP is tried and true, nothing wrong with it. Jon. |
OT online back up
One of the nice things about Apple's OS X operating system is an
automatic incremental backup utility called Time Machine. When your computer is connected to an external drive it automatically backs up everything on whatever schedule you want, and you can retrieve files from whatever backup date you want. The backup doesn't take long because it's incremental -- saving only the recent changes. The user interface is pretty cool, too. Unix has had incremental backup for ages, and Time Machine may built on top of that utility because OS X has Unix under the hood. BTW, I just posted this to annoy Jon. :-) -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
OT online back up
On May 5, 10:28 am, rw wrote:
BTW, I just posted this to annoy Jon. :-) Gee thanks...now the rest of my day is ruined... Jon. PS: http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/onlamp/2...n_homedir.html |
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