Backed up, lately ?
At first, when a pal of mine called to rant about the new tendency of his OS to go "hasta la Vista", I laughed. He is an IT professional, and a little swine flu in his computer is no big deal. Or so I thought. What started as an occasional hiccup on Thursday apparently turned into an unspectacular but complete Exitus on Friday: The computer simply didn't boot no more.
Of course we all know, often from individual experience, that a disk drive with a "mean time between failure" (MTBF) of indicated 500'000 hours is NEVER the one drive that we bought. Rather, we usually seem to get the "mean failure" version, whereas other people must be getting the "time between".
Nevertheless, this apparently hasn't taught us to be diligent with our backups. As far as backups of data on personal PCs go, most people are either in the "ignorant and negligent" or "knowing and diligent" camps. The special corner of data loss hell, the "knowing but negligent" section, seems to be solely populated by IT and technology people.
It doesn't have to be you. Go buy that USB or eSATA drive, and get that copy made TODAY.
Comments
The sad irony is that a more recent backup was available, but it was on an external drive that I had chosen to "repurpose" just last week...and had done a full zero-byte-overwrite-erase to be 'secure'. ACK!
Needless to say, a few people are pissed of at ME for not having copies of their documents...despite everyone having their own flash drive for important stuff ... Time to get a regular "when the power is on files are being copied somewhere else" backup in place for the rebuilt laptop!
PJ
Oct 19th 2009
1 decade ago
GFI has released a free product called GFI Home BAckup available at http://www.gfi.com/backup-hm that is working nicely for my family and friends.
RJ
Oct 19th 2009
1 decade ago
It also serves as a media server...
SW
Oct 19th 2009
1 decade ago
There are many online backup systems available (carbonite, etc), and they seem to work pretty well. Automated backups to secure Internet storage sounds great, but I question just how 'secure' they really are. Wouldn't this be a great way to steal millions of petabytes of data from unsuspecting consumers (and getting paid to do it, no less)? Anyone have any experience with these systems?
Lee
Oct 19th 2009
1 decade ago
daniel@isc
Oct 19th 2009
1 decade ago
Was the information sniffed before or after encryption?
Algis
Oct 19th 2009
1 decade ago
Recently, I have discovered I need to buy a bigger external drive as I take way too many digital photos with my camera.
Jason
Oct 19th 2009
1 decade ago
Also, I want to use online backups, but I'm also too concerned about privacy of storage on another company's servers. I've consulted the legal industry about this, but they're behind the times technically and don't have a concrete secure recommendation. They seem to want everything to go to court first.
Brian
Oct 19th 2009
1 decade ago
Once you've got that going, you need to figure out what the button actually does. Unfortunately, in many of these systems, the button does not do any kind of true event generation but is like a hotkey on a keyboard launching an app. I do not know if that app is willing to try to launch if you're not logged on. If it is, of course, you can redirect the button to your script.
As far as the remote backup / trusting their encryption goes - why not encrypt your backups yourself, to a local folder, and upload that folder to the hosting service? You'll save a lot of bandwidth that way - most good encryption compresses as well. You will want your private keyrings burned to cd-r and in a safety deposit box and otherwise stored only on an encrypted thumb drive, but if you're really as concerned as you say you are, those steps have already been taken.
peter
Oct 19th 2009
1 decade ago
Still playing with it, and have not had to *knock on wood* recover, but it's free and fast. And I know who is looking at my data.
Does anyone know of an exchange aware inexpensive block level backup app?
partnerd
Oct 20th 2009
1 decade ago