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Re: Friam Digest, Vol 154, Issue 18

Posted by Gillian Densmore on Apr 27, 2016; 2:05pm
URL: http://friam.383.s1.nabble.com/Re-Friam-Digest-Vol-154-Issue-18-tp7587425p7587432.html

@Nick Or do more than one kind of backup.

If you use Amazon they have (had?) a bit of free space for there cloud stuff. Dropbox rocks for just files/pictures etc (only 2gigs though) SkyDrive is a bit bigger(8-10gigs). Also pretty cool for just files.
Pretty much anything internet and cloud related will be slow. A backup over USB is faster if you have one at your house.
 Your right that crashplan has a rep for being slow. Nova might be faster.

A couple of other choices to consider:

Rackspace:
https://www.rackspace.com/en-us/cloud/backup.

They have a rep for cloud backup that's super fast. Add used to even offer to send a helper wherever you were. Though I don't see that now.

And I used CloudHQ Once ages ago. Basecamp was pretty cool when I used it.  Canbackup to all kinds of places and was(is? ) free
https://www.cloudhq.net/backup-basecamp


Looking around for a userfriendly amazon cloud drive doodad. So as you can start backing up. and I so I don't overwhelm you with choices.
CloudDrive I used once- worked but a little fickle and slow:
http://download.cnet.com/Amazon-Cloud-Drive/3000-18500_4-75711094.html

RainbowDrive might also be a start because speaks the binary language of moister vaperators and profeciant in over 9M forms of back up:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/store/apps/rainbowdrive/9wzdncrfj2c6

When I last used RainbowDrive it was a back-up-to anyplace kind of doodad and free. At the time was super fun and easy to use.

Hopefully one of these options works out for you. My biased to shareware and free stuff is mostly so you can use whatever you already have while deeling with fam problems just to get started.

Force be with you and yours!





On Tue, Apr 26, 2016 at 11:57 PM, Robert Wall <[hidden email]> wrote:
Nick,

I have worried about the loss of my data as well and have searched for an economical solution. For me, losing a device (e.g., by a crash or by theft) is not nearly as critical a loss as losing my data.  Hardware can be replaced.  Lost data, likely, cannot.  But losing a hard drive also means the loss of your applications (not just data), which would have to be reinstalled unless you have a reinstallable image of your hard disk, including the operating system.  I have lots of applications, some of which are just downloads with not associated physical media, which is fairly typical now.

My solution, after doing the trade-offs and comparing reviews, was to go with NovaStor's NovaBackup (a new startup I think) for an introductory price of about $50 for the software, but including a year's worth of technical support.  What I liked especially is that they will help you set up a schedule of backups as part of the service over the internet--this support takes less than an hour.  This service is not like Carbonite or CrashPlan where your data (not apps) gets backed up to the cloud, though that would be just another layer of protection.  This solution is just the software to back everything up to wherever even Dropbox, software you will own forever (i.e., a one-time cost).  I chose to back up my data and my hard disk image to a USB-connected 2 TB hard disk that I purchased from Amazon for $75.  NovaStor will even help you create a boot "disk" on a flash drive if your hard disk actually crashes. Everyone should have a boot disk to recover from a corrupted operating system.

However, even in this seemingly robust set up you will still be vulnerable to the so-called ransomware attacks--which are on the rise--where everything (apps and data) local or connected by a network or by USB--gets encrypted.  The survival strategy for this kind of attack is to have an image stored offline [unconnected].  For this, NovaStor will show you how to save an image on a flash drive away from the attackers.  High-capacity flash drives are quite cheap these days.  I back up a new image to my USB-connected hard disk every week. I roll off another image backup to the offline flash drive every so often, just to be sure. 

In order to have NovaStor continue with support after the first year, I suspect I would have to shell out another $50, but I am not sure that I will need this.  This solution is just backup software. But if it works and you have your backup schedules set up, what more  needs to be done?  The updates would need to be fantastic!

Hope this addresses your question.  Be assured that I receive no compensation from NovaStor for this review. 😊  This solution just seems to "answer the mail" for me at least.

Cheers,

Robert

On Tue, Apr 26, 2016 at 9:31 PM, Nick Thompson <[hidden email]> wrote:

Hi, Michael, and others,

 

I would happily spend the money to have somebody do it for me, but I cannot give up my machine under the current circumstances for the 3 or 4 days that the services require.  I am thinking that if I follow Jack’s instructions, I can swap out the new hard drive and see if it works.  If it doesn’t, I am no worse off.  The transfer of files could be done overnight. 

 

All my data is up on Carbonite, but the last time I had to do this, it took two days to download over an Ethernet connection.

 

Nick

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

 

From: Friam [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of Michael Stevens
Sent: Tuesday, April 26, 2016 10:48 AM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Friam Digest, Vol 154, Issue 18

 

Nick,

   If you wanted to transfer only “files,” like the text of a paper, photographs, a spreadsheet, etc. there are plenty of ways to do that. (You probably know this, I’m not trying to insult your intelligence!) However, if software is involved, e.g. Word, Excel, etc., I think it’s much more complicated. What you have heard about an image is correct, but I wouldn’t recommend that as a do-it-yourself project, particularly in a distracted state of mind with family troubles. There are just too many little things that could go wrong. My advice is to hire someone. Price range would most likely be $100 - $150, but that’s only a guess.

Best of luck,

Mike Stevens

Berkeley

On Apr 26, 2016, at 9:00 AM, [hidden email] wrote:



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Today's Topics:

  1. Sober, clear advice needed (Nick Thompson)

From: "Nick Thompson" <[hidden email]>

Subject: [FRIAM] Sober, clear advice needed

Date: April 25, 2016 at 11:17:38 AM PDT

To: "Friam" <[hidden email]>

 

Hi, everybody,

 

A substantial family calamity occurred in Massachusetts on Friday, on the same day that a technician who replaced my motherboard here warned me that my hard drive is on its last legs.  I have a new hard drive sitting on my desk from HP and HP will come install it, but under my circumstances I cannot afford any break in my communication with My People in Massachusetts. 

 

Here is where I need your advice.  I keep being told that it is possible to make an “image” of one’s hard drive.  I imagine this means, I pay a hundred bucks for a black box, I plug the black box into my computer, I let it whir for a night, and then there is a copy of my hard drive on the black box.  Then, when my present hard drive dies, I have HP replace it, I plug the black box into the computer again, let it whir for another night, and when I wake up in the morning, resume my life exactly as it was. 

 

Is such a thing possible? Could it be done by a “citizen” (as Owen calls us) who is much distracted by other things. Can you recommend a particular black box.  One problem that DotFoil has suggested is that my old hard drive may have errors on it, and that transferring an “image” (if such a thing is possible) will transfer those errors, with possibly fatal consequences.  Should I perhaps run error correction software somewhere in that process. 

 

Please advise,

 

Nick

 

P.S.  Everybody’s safe.    

 

Nicholas S. Thompson

Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology

Clark University

 



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