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Subject: FileSlinger(TM) Backup Reminder 8-19-05: The Family That Backs Up Together, Part 3 - August19, 2005




Dear Subscriber,

Last week we talked about backing up corporate laptops. This
week we??™ll check in with my father's wife, Pam.

Dad and Pam have been married for almost 15 years. Pam is the
only one of my family members who subscribes to my newsletter.
Not surprisingly, she was the first person to respond to my
post-vacation e-mail asking about backups.

When I asked my kinfolk about backups, I also asked whether any
of them had ever suffered serious data loss due to a computer
crash or other problem. Pam??™s answer to this was "When I had my
old Aptiva computer the motherboard failed and I lost all of the
information on my hard drive, but that was in the days of
floppies and my critical work product was backed up on those
floppies so it was not a catastrophic event."

Pam has both a desktop computer in her office at the Cleveland
house and a laptop which she takes with her when she joins Dad
in Chicago. Unlike Dad??™s laptop, hers is her personal property
and not supplied by an employer, so she is responsible for
backing it up herself.

Because of her frequent travel between Chicago and Cleveland,
Pam was initially hoping to find a backup solution which would
create a bootable duplicate of her drive so she could plug it
into Dad??™s computer, reboot, and run all of her own software as
well as having access to her files.

Alas, it doesn??™t work that way, though the language in which CMS
advertises their external laptop drives sure makes it sound as
if it does. (See http://www.cmsproducts.com/product_absplus_usb2_win.htm
for details.) There??™s a difference between being able to take a
drive out of its case, stick it into your computer, format it,
and *then* boot from it and being able to plug your USB drive in
and boot from that into an exact duplicate of your installed
system. (Though, interestingly, I have a client whose RAID-1
machine always tries to boot from the USB external drive if it??™s
plugged in, so after backing up he has to remember to unplug the
XHD.)

I know there are thumb drives from which you can run certain
specialized programs, so the day is probably not too far off
when ordinary end-users can in fact carry drives instead of
laptops, but we??™re not quite there yet.

Even after I gave her the bad news, though, Pam decided to go
with the CMS 40 GB ABS Plus drive for laptops, which comes with
BounceBack Professional. This is a USB 2 external drive, so
she??™s also getting a Hi Speed USB 2.0 Cardbus Adapter. "I was
hoping to have this up and running before vacation but ran out
of time," she wrote. "So I will let you know how this works."

I??™ve never used BounceBack, professional or otherwise, so I??™m
curious. The ABS series of drives from CMS have gotten good
reviews in the Mac mags (or they had at the time I was shopping
for 2.5??? external drives), but they seemed to cost more per
megabyte than drives which didn??™t come with proprietary
software, and the bare 80 GB Toshiba drive and separate drive
housing which I ended up buying cost between 1/2 and 2/3 of what
I would have paid for the ABS Plus.

However, not everyone wants to fumble with teeny weeny screws
and ribbon cables while they assemble their own external drive,
never mind figuring out how to format it. (I admit, knowing
where I had to right-click in the ???Computer Services??? pane
stumped me for a while.) And the ABS comes with some handy
features for people who prefer their backup in
set-it-and-forget-it mode, like FastSync, Scheduler, and Power
Down. Plus it comes in some nice bright colors. But at $200 for
40 MB, it??™s definitely one of the more expensive drives of its
kind.

As I mentioned above, Pam also has a desktop computer at home,
and she??™s been backing this up on CD using Adaptec Easy CD
Creator 4. She??™s planning to move the hard drive backups onto
the ABS Plus as well, because it will be faster and easier. (I
might have recommended a larger drive for backing up two
computers, but it depends on the size of the hard drives on the
computers being backed up, and on the amount of data being
stored there.)

I??™ve asked Pam to post a comment to the Backup Blog
(http://fileslinger.com/blog/) when she has the drive set up, so
we can all find out how well the ABS Plus lives up to its
billing.

Pam teaches classes for paralegals at Myers University, but she
doesn??™t know how Myers backs up its computers. My guess is that
their system is pretty similar to that used at Dad??™s corporation
or at the universities where I studied and later taught: network
storage and backup of those servers onto tape. The Myers IT
department (http://www.dnmyers.edu/it/Default.htm) has lots of
nice pictures of new-looking computers and listings of
business-related computing courses, but no specs on the campus??™
overall computing facilities, support staff, or policies and
procedures, and no direct contact information. So either I??™ll
have to pick up the phone (not that!) and try to find the right
person to ask, or my curiosity will just have to go
unsatisfied.

Now that I??™m coming to the end of my family, I??™d like to invite
readers to write in and tell us how *you* back up your
computers. I??™ve already had one or two people do so. I think
real-life stories are better than abstract product reviews and
announcements, though I plan to continue with those,
particularly on the blog in midweek.

And remember: backup systems only work if you use them!

************************************************************
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.

Want to read about something besides backups? Visit Sallie??™s
other blogs:
Author-ized Articles (http://authorizer.fileslinger.com/articleblog/)
FileSlinger(TM) Favorites (http://fileslinger.com/favorites).
************************************************************
If you enjoy The FileSlinger(TM) Backup Reminder, please forward
it to friends and colleagues. It comes to you every Friday from
writer and small business consultant Sallie Goetsch. If you're
an independent professional in the Bay Area, check out
http://www.fileslinger.com for the help you can't afford to be
without.

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to opt in.

*****************************************************
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****************************************************



Sallie Goetsch | The FileSlinger
3020 El Cerrito Plz #371 | El Cerrito, CA 94530
Tel. 510-526-7244 | eFax 208-439-7876
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