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Subject: FileSlinger(TM) Backup Reminder 08-05-05: The Family that Backs Up Together, Part I - August05, 2005




Dear Subscriber,

Here as promised is the first installment in the reminder
miniseries "The Family that Backs Up Together." The truth is that
my family doesn't actually back up *together*, or even all on the
same schedule, but with three generations of computer users
spread across the U.S. and beyond, my family provides a kind of
microcosm in which to explore different backup options as applied
in real life.

As I mentioned in my previous column, I spent the week of July
16-23 in the company of 14 relatives by blood and marriage: my
father and his brother and sister, their respective children and
grandchildren and spouses and in-laws. Even though I'd pre-loaded
a newsletter to go out while I was on vacation, I spent some time
on that Friday hounding my family members about how they backed
up their computers.

"I don't have one," my sister-in-law Donna said. "Alex has one
and the kids each have one, but I don't have one, so I let him
take care of that."

My not-so-little brother wasn't there to ask at the moment, but
his e-mail response arrived in the nick of time: "We do nothing
to back up at home. I occasionally have burned pictures to CD,
but found some that became unreadable after a few years."

I can see I'm going to have to work on Alex.

My uncle Robert, last of the family to get online, doesn??™t own
his own computer either, though he uses them at work. (Very few
people these days can avoid using computers at work, even if they
want to. Auto mechanics and laundromats have computers.)

Alex, like Robert, works for a law firm, but Alex has a company
laptop and Robert doesn't. Alex is spared backing up any data on
the laptop by virtue of the fact that there isn't any data on it:
everything is kept on the company network.

That's a sensible approach for companies to take, given the
frequency and ease with which laptops are stolen. The data on the
machine is definitely more sensitive and probably more valuable
than the hardware. Alex's firm, in fact, uses a web-client based
system, so the data actually lives at the IT company's facility
and not on the law firm's premises. As far as Alex knows, the IT
company backs up to tape every night and sends the tapes to a
secure facility for storage.

My father's sister Jean (mother of my cousin Jason the Mac geek)
also uses a laptop provided by her employer to work from home,
though in her case she's restricted to dial-up connections and
didn't feel any need to bring her work with her on vacation.
(Given the fact that the land line only seemed to work in one
room, and that was Alex and Donna's bedroom, it's just as well.)

Because Jean's employer takes care of backing up its own network,
Jason doesn??™t do anything with her laptop. He does back up his
mother's desktop machine (which runs Windows 98 SE), though it's
a bit tricky.

Jason, as I said before, is a Mac person. The software on his
network/firewire external hard drive (which he keeps plugged into
the router) doesn't work with Windows computers. So before he
runs his own backups, Jason has to back up Jean's hard drive over
the network. He does this by copying her drive (about 6 GB in
total) onto his own hard drive. That way Jean's data gets backed
up along with his when the software does its thing.

"And what about you?" I asked my cousin Amanda after her brother
had finished explaining this. After years of working multiple
jobs in restaurants, salsa bars, and real-estate offices, Amanda
and her husband Jose-Luis now run a business buying, fixing up,
and re-selling houses in the Los Angeles area, so their business
data is on their home computer.

"I haven't set anything up for them yet," Jason said. Since
getting laid off from his job as an Earthlink help desk staffer a
few years ago, Jason has been helping out with the construction
business, so it would be natural for him to be interested in the
technical side even if not for the family connection. But Jason
lives with Jean in Pasadena and Amanda and Jose-Luis are in Santa
Monica, so he can't supervise their computer 24/7.

"I don??™t know," Amanda answered on her own behalf. "Jose-Luis
does it about once a month. Onto disk, I think. Our housemate the
computer expert set up the scripts."

At eighteen months, Amanda??™s son Andrew doesn't have his own
computer yet, but he'll happily sit in Amanda??™s lap at the
keyboard. Still, he'd rather watch Elmo on DVD. At seven, my
nephew Zachary explained to me the dinosaurs-versus-dragons game
he'd popped into the computer in the office at Grouse Nest. I
wonder??¦is it too early to start educating Zachary about backups?

Tune in next week for part two of "The Family that Backs Up
Together," when you??™ll get to Meet the Parents. But first??”go make
your own backups!

****************************************************************
Remember to visit the FileSlinger(TM) Backup Blog
(http://www.fileslinger.com/blog/) for between-reminders backup
information and for back issues of this newsletter. You can post
comments and questions right on the blog site, too.
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Sallie Goetsch | The FileSlinger
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