Re: Image Backups and Vista
- From: "Dave Lee" <DaveLeeNC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 9 Nov 2008 13:37:48 -0500
Thanks, Max. At 1-1 compression I do believe that a larger USB attached drive just made my Christmas list.
dave
"The Max" <max.imus@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:1v2eh4t5gv45h7lc3esvr328ou66dvav2n@xxxxxxxxxx
On Sun, 9 Nov 2008 09:57:55 -0500, "Dave Lee"
<DaveLeeNC@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I would like to capture an occasional snapshot of my whole system (Dell XPS
laptop). The purpose here would that, in the unfortunate case of having to
do a complete re-install due to hardware or software problems, I could get
back (in a relatively simple fashion) to some known execution environment
where most of my applications were installed and registered/running/etc.
Data backups (while they would probably exist in this scheme) that I care
about would be done separately and much more frequently.
There is a lot of stuff out there from the commercial Windows world (like
Acronis) to stuff from a Unix/Linux heritage such as Ghost. I have a couple
of simple questions.
1) I assume that this (at least in principle) is do-able - that right? If so
do you have recommendations as to the right software package?
Acronis True Image.
2) Any general "gotcha's" to be concerned about? FWIW my data backups take
two forms. All the personal data that I care about is stored in a single
(but complicated) folder structure and that is backed up regularly just as a
copy to a USB-2 attached harddrive. My Windows Live Mail data is backed up
via Vista Backup/Restore.
3) I would really like to do this to CD/DVD's (have a relatively recent
vintage CD/DVD drive that supports pretty much all the read and write
formats that existed as of 1/2008). But I have no idea as to how many disks
I could ultimately be dealing with here. Does anyone have any experience
with this out there? Right now I'm looking at around 80G of used space on my
Dell XPS laptop. But down the read this could get up to as much as 200G.
That will involve a LOT of DVDs: do the math. You won't get that much
compression, so just figure it 1:1.
While it's doable with DVDs, an external USB hard drive would be a
smarter choice, and a lot faster. PLUS your backups could be
accomplished unattended.
--
Max
.
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- From: Dave Lee
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