Thank goodness for Firewire
My desktop PC's data disk is dying - so I'm updating everything on it to my firewire backup disk (including the stuff I don't normally backup).
Proabbaly time to rethink just how I use this machine. I'm considering dropping it down to a single disk system, but with a much bigger drive. Following a suggestion from
jonhoneyball, I'll be running scheduled backups to two firewire drives - and (as
ramtops suggests) handing one to a friend when we go on holiday (or sticking it in the car when we're away in the UK).
I have to remember - this PC is my whole livelihood now. And I need to treat it as being that important.
And there are things on it which may not be work, but are still important to me. So I need to back them up as well.
Proabbaly time to rethink just how I use this machine. I'm considering dropping it down to a single disk system, but with a much bigger drive. Following a suggestion from
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I have to remember - this PC is my whole livelihood now. And I need to treat it as being that important.
And there are things on it which may not be work, but are still important to me. So I need to back them up as well.
Backups
Me, my excuse is to back up my personal data onto the 20Gb iPod every day, after I finish work, using rsync. Takes about a minute at most, and the fact it's on an iPod means I carry it everywhere I'd take a walkman, which is to say everywhere -- the house could burn down but as long as I could source a second-hand iMac I'd be back in business rapidly.
(Don't bother backing up the system or most of the apps -- don't need to, I write in ASCII. Do bother backing up email and administrivia and photographs and such. The apps and OS are replaceable commodities but the data is the stuff you live or die by. At least, that's my experience. Now I've got this TiBook with a 60Gb drive I could do with a 100Gb iPod to hold my Sims installation ...)
Re: Backups
no subject
So if my hard drive failed tomorrow, I wouldn't lost much data, but that's only part of the equation. What I would lose is time.
Murphy's law dictates that your hard disk will fail, and probably the day before you have to have your most important project ready to demo to your most important client, when the last thing you have time for is rebuilding the system.
It can take the best part of a day to get an OS installed and configured to your liking (and even an emergency temporary configuration can take a couple of hours), and it can be weeks before everything is back to your favourite personalised settings. Plus you always find things that were missing from your backup, like that macro that comes in handy every once in a while.
So my next PC will definately have two mirrored hard drives (RAID 0). I might put it in this one if I feel the urge (but it would be nice to switch to SerialATA at the same time). This means that if anything happens to either drive, the other one has a complete copy of everything, available instantly, no downtime. Just get a replacement drive when you get the chance and everything will sync back to that.
An IDE RAID card only costs a few quid, plus the cost of a second drive, which is very cheap for a PC that's your livelihood.
Of course backups are still essential - RAID won't protect you from somebody dropping a safe on your computer...
(no subject)
(no subject)
MAC OSX can do it automagically...
Re: So can Windows NT/2000/XP
Re: So can Windows NT/2000/XP
Re: So can Windows NT/2000/XP
Re: So can Windows NT/2000/XP
no subject
And there are things on it which may not be work, but are still important to me. So I need to back them up as well.
I"m glad you are backing up, and taking of yourself and your work needs. Good for you to take that seriously!! And I am sure you will come up with the coolest and most effective sitch there is. You're my *favoritest* geek in the world! *Hugs*