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#1 |
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Backing up your new iMac
I'm interested to hear people's plans for how they intend to back up the data on their new iMacs when they eventually arrive.
If the price is not too high I will probably get the fusion drive with 3TB, how would you recommend me to back this up? I'm not considering Apple's time machine because it seems way too expensive so this is where I see my options. I can buy a 2TB external hard drive for around £65 but the cheapest 3TB is about £120. I may as well get two 2TB drives for roughly the same price as a single 3TB one, but if I was to do that I'll never be able to use the time machine function effectively will I? What would you guys recommend, and tell me what your plans are? |
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#2 |
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That is a large price difference between 2 and 3TB. Here in The Netherlands the difference is smaller.
Anyway, I think I would buy an external HDD of at least 3TB to use with Time Machine. It is the easiest option and after installing it will all run automatic. And: if you loose all your data because you don't have a backup, you'll gladly pay £120 to get it back
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27" iMac i5 8GB - iPod 80GB - iPhone 4 32GB - iPad2 - Airport Extreme - Airport Express |
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#3 |
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I use Carbon Copy Cloner and an external hard drive for backup. It's not automatic but it does provide you with a bootable hard drive.
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#4 |
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A toaster style usb 3 external drive holder and carbon copy cloner.
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{2012 27imac-3.4i7-680mx-32gb ram-768SSD+External TB Samsung840pro ssd + TB velociraptors-UAD Apollo/Marantz/Amphion/Bowers&Wilkins Sound-Impulse 61} {ipads}{iphones} |
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#5 |
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I'm backing up 5 macs using time machine to a 2 tb time capsule, and also making a carbon copy cloner backup of my work machine weekly.
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sudo make me a sandwich |
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#6 | |
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Here is the link for the backpack http://www.twelvesouth.com/products/backpack/ |
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#7 | |
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![]() Edit: Might as well throw my backup system out there. My iMac (which houses pictures, videos, music, irreplaceable stuff) gets backed up hourly via Time Machine, cloned via CCC nightly, and backed up off-site via CrashPlan. My Air only gets backed up to Time Machine since it is my secondary computer and I could restore all the stuff on it (nothing irreplaceable). My mom's MacBook Pro gets backed up to Time Machine, also, but I am thinking about adding her to my CrashPlan account since she has photos and videos she couldn't replace, too.
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2010 15" MacBook Pro, Anti-Glare Hi-Res, 2.4 i5 128 GB SSD & 500GB HDD in optibay; iPhone 5 32GB; ATV3; 2011 Core i7 27" iMac 2GB VRAM; "New" iPad 32GB AT&T 4G; 2012 MacBook Air 13", i7, 8GB, 256GB |
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#8 | |
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My question still remains is it better to pay £130 for 2 2TB external HDD, so 4TB of storage? Or pay £120 for one 3TB drive for just 3TB of storage? |
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#9 | |
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2.5" external drive take their power from the usb port. 3.5" external drive will have one usb cable and one power cable that you need to plug in a power outlet. 2.5" drives usually cost more than a 3.5". If you get 2 drives (2tb) you will have 2 devices using one USB port each and connecting to 2 power outlets. Having one 3tb drive will consume 1 usb port and 1 power outlet. Two drives will also make more noise and consume more electricity. There is no right answer, you need to find if capacity is more important. I would personally go with one 3tb. I still prefer 2.5" drives, since you don't have to connect them to a power outlet. |
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#10 |
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anyone looked into the Lacie Cloudbox?
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#11 | |
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Right now I just back my MBP up to an external drive I got at Costco. I will be purchasing a Synology DS412+ or similar NAS unit this Christmas. If you don't want to go all out but just want a reliable, quality NAS, look at Synology's single drive units.
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01001101 01101111 01101100 01101111 01101110 00100000 01001100 01100001 01100010 01100101 |
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#12 | |
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I'm not looking for anything fancy just a cheap storage device to back up my stuff, as it stands that 3rd TB of disk space is way over priced when compared to the fire 2 TB. |
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#13 | |
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Secondly... you need to consider your off-site backup strategy. I would strongly recommend that you avoid any strategy that requires manual intervention. Humans have good intentions... but few follow through and actually manually rotate drives on/off site. A much better way (and more secure way) is to use the cloud. There are several good cloud providers: Carbonite, Crashplan, Mozy, etc. I personally use Crashplan+ and think they are ideal. /Jim |
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#14 | |
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Not sure if others have asked, but do you plan on filling up the 3TB drive on the iMac? How much of the 3TB drive do you intend to use internally on the iMac? A 2 TB external TM backup drive could be plenty if you don't go over 2TB worth of data on the mac.
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PowerMac G3 450 B&W, K-Lime iBook G3/466SE, PB G4 867(Ti), G4 800 DP(Quicksilver), PB G4 1.5 17" (Al), IpodT 1G, 08 24" iMac, MBP 09 17", iP3GS, iPad1, iPad2, iP4S, '12 27" iMac. |
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iMac 27" 2010 i5 2.8ghz; Macbook Air 13" 2011 i5 |
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#16 |
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File server running netatalk (AFP), backed up with Time Machine. Better than a "Time Capsule".
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#17 |
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#18 |
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I would imagine an Apple-branded device with router function to be slightly limited.
If it works for you. Sometimes convenience is better than flexibility. |
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#19 | |
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However... your advice to have a second backup to the cloud is very sound advise... and something that I would advise nearly everyone to do. /Jim |
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