Backing Up Computer?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Inspired
  • Start date Start date
I

Inspired

New member
What's the easiest and best way to back up all the important stuff on a computer? You know, in case of a crash or something. I like the idea of getting a big external hard drive and putting everything on that. Is this the way to go?
 
MAC - LaCie Utility.

For MAC you can buy a LaCie HD they have a great backup utility (comes with the HD).

1. Select your drive.
2. Select your destination

and its done.

Hope this can help someone out :)
 
I like the idea of one of those LaCie external desktop hard drives. Their site has a 320GB listed at $149.99, and is fully PC and Mac compatible. I forgot to mention that I have an HP Pavilion. Only wish I had a Mac Pro!

Here's another question to show my rookie side:

Several of those LaCie HD's come with eSATA 3Gbits, FireWire 800, FireWire 400 and USB 2.0 interfaces. Which one would I use for my PC?
 
I use a WD My Book external firewire drive, seperated into 2 partitions (one for OS/programs and one for samples). SuperDuper clones my 2 internal drives in my G5 to the two separate partitions on my MyBook. Pretty quick and easy.
 
Ethan is right (for PCs)! Though with more modern operating systems, you'll need to increase the size of your system partition. Sound libraries have also increased in size.

I like a 20GB O/S partition and the rest for data. Also as RAM increases to multiple GBs, so will your page files, so you'll need space somewhere for a page file (and a hibernation file equal to your RAM if you enable hibernation) that is atleast equal to your RAM. Ideally the page file is on a separate physical disk, but as drive sizes and speeds have increased, there are usually fewer, larger drives leaving you to locate your page file on the same physical disk as the OS or your data. I'd choose the OS disk over the audio disk if you have more than one physical disk.

If I have 2 physical hard drives, I'll make the the 2nd one a single partition for audio work. This leaves me with C: (OS), D: (basic data, MP3s, sound libraries, etc.) and E: recording audio). Use an image utility to backup the C: drive so you don't have to reinstall Windows and all your programs when you replace the hard drive (make sure to make a new image after major software installations or updates). And use any number of utilities to backup the data on the other partitions/drives.

1TB drives and external USB2 enclosures are very cheap, so get one or two to use solely for backups. I like Seagate drives the most.

Large, cheap disks are great, but the failure rates are atronomically higher than on the smaller drives of 6 or 7 years ago. At the risk of sounding dramatic, I see backups as absolutely essential, not a luxury. I've had too many 200GB drives fail to not make backups.

Another side note is that system restore points in XP and Vista eat a lot of space, so I limit the space they are allowed to use, and periodically turn them off and back on to clear the space they've used if I'm desparate for space.
 
FOr basic files and folders (eg project files and wav samples etc) you should definitely backup everything on an external drive. You can get 500GB usb drives pretty cheap now. The IT guy for my dayjob has us backup our files and folders on two separate removable hardrives one on site and one off. We also use an online storage facility and have remote access to the system just incase we need someone to do an emergency repair or fix.
 
I use Norton Ghost...makes a complete image of the drive...great if you've got to completely restore a computer.
 
Back
Top