Wow. Reading this just gave me a big jolt of anxiety! 😢 😢 😢Yeah, no.
A short story that happened some months ago. My sister, a teacher, called me in full panic mode. All her school related documents, which she stores in iCloud, were gone. Her iCloud drive was empty.
So I told her to look into her backup. Which she didn't have 🙄 Luckily for her, Apple offers some sort of data recovery on the icloud website and I was able to restore (most) of the files. One of her kids managed to **** around in the icloud app on her iPhone...
One place is not good enough for valuable data. You absolutely need a backup of these files for that one time disaster strikes. You'll probably never need it of course. I, for example, never ever lost a hard drive before it was too late, but do I want to take any chances? Hell no.
Btw. Setting up my work computer definitely takes a while. And it needs my attention. A full backup is a press of a button and involves some time I can invest elsewhere. That's a huge difference.
Do you use Windows 10's in-built backup?I do my backups using Windows in-built backup, stored on a local NAS. Never had a single issue to be honest. Really comes down to how much you really need backups and how committed you are to finding a solution based on how important your files are and the effect of downtime on what you do.
Cloud is fine for the majority of home users to ensure their photos and word docs are backed up without needing to worry about Windows.
Not exactly. You can use File History and it runs automatically, and also manually create system images.Wow. Reading this just gave me a big jolt of anxiety! 😢 😢 😢
I agree about "setting up my work computer" because it definitely takes time to setup a Mac or Windows machine the right way...
Do you use Windows 10's in-built backup?
It seems like a user needs to constantly create a new "Image" of the entire HDD which takes a LONG TIME to do when you're dealing with a HDD that's bigger than 1TB... Does Windows 10 in-built backup do incremental backups at all?
Am I right about this?
I was getting the same "no backup yet" message for a couple of weeks out of the blue, and found that the File History service had been set to disabled on startup. I re-enabled it to Automatic and now File History works as it should.To this date the Windows File history backup does not work on my work laptop. Every time I open it it says: no backup yet. It's highly irritating and I don't trust it one bit.
Currently trying True Image and it seems to work just fine. Seems to be exactly what I want. Too bad the cloud backup gets so expensive, will stick to Crashplan for that.
that's weird and one more reason not to trust it 😀I was getting the same "no backup yet" message for a couple of weeks out of the blue, and found that the File History service had been set to disabled on startup. I re-enabled it to Automatic and now File History works as it should.
Well, I didn't lose any previous File History backups, so I still trust it. Now I know to check whether the service is enabled if it happens again.that's weird and one more reason not to trust it 😀
Thanks for the update.Just wanted to update this thread.
Not for nothing, this is one reason why I do like having my 360 subscription. I get a terabyte of storage, and I can store my documents, Pictures, and Desktop folder on OneDrive. That handles much of my backup needs, and the only thing I really need to backup is my lightroom folders. I may push them onto OneDrive, but I prefer to keep them on my local drive.Too bad the cloud storage is so expensive
I'm happy with Crashplan, used it for years now. I collected a lot of photos and videos over the years and need 3TB of backup storage right now. It just would be nice to have both the local and offsite backup in one tool. But I can live with that.Thanks for the update.
Not for nothing, this is one reason why I do like having my 360 subscription. I get a terabyte of storage, and I can store my documents, Pictures, and Desktop folder on OneDrive. That handles much of my backup needs, and the only thing I really need to backup is my lightroom folders. I may push them onto OneDrive, but I prefer to keep them on my local drive.
Cloning software like Acronis True Image is the closest thingIs there something other than Winclone to make a backup bootable drive for Windows Bootcamp?
+1 for acronis true image, we use it all the time at work. Just remember to chkdsk /x the source disk before attempting a clone.Cloning software like Acronis True Image is the closest thing
But it is no good for a bootable one for the Mac Mike,Cloning software like Acronis True Image is the closest thing
My mistake, I thought you were looking for a PC solution.But it is no good for a bootable one for the Mac Mike,
No problem have a nice day. 🙂My mistake, I thought you were looking for a PC solution.
Disk genius can create a bootable clone of your bootcamp/windows partition. It is free.
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