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The absurdly simple guide to backing up your PC
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The first rule of PC Club is: Always, always back up.
Thankfully, backing up your most important data is a cinch. It’s the
getting off your rear to actually do it that stymies most people, myself
included.
We’ll discuss emotional motivation later. (You’ll laugh! You’ll cry!)
But first, let’s walk through your many storage options to see how
deceptively simple it is to back up everything right now—before your inevitable data disaster occurs.
The options
Method A: Fork over the $50 to $100 a year and back
up the data from all your PCs and mobile devices to an online storage
service such as Carbonite, Google Drive, iDrive, iCloud, Mozy, or SkyDrive.
Choose the one that supports all (or the largest percentage) of your
devices, and use the downloadable app that the service provides to
maintain a mirror of your files on your local PC.
SkyDrive is a pretty trustworthy, easy-to-use off-site backup tool.Of course, this method works only if you have regular access to enough upstream bandwidth to handle all your essential data.
Method B: Consolidate the data from your mobile
devices onto your primary computer. Buy the fastest, most capacious
external hard drive you can afford—two, if possible. Use the Windows
built-in app (the File Recovery tool in Windows 7, or the File History
tool in Windows 8) to create a system image and a recovery CD/flash
drive. Subsequently, use Windows Backup to back up your important data
daily, weekly, or monthly to the hard drive. Create a backup of your
backups to an online service if practical.
Using Method A, Method B, or a combination of both will protect 99
percent of PCs 99 percent of the time, though it’s worth noting that
local backups restore far more quickly.
You can stop reading now—unless, of course, you’re a seeker of the
perfect backup plan, or you want some practical advice. In that case,
keep going.
The platinum rule
It doesn’t get any more basic in backup than the rule of three. To
lower the risk of data loss to the freak-karmic-event level, you must
have three copies of your important data: the original, a backup of the
original, and a backup of the backup. The secondary and tertiary copies
should be in different locations: Ideally, keep one on premises (local)
for swift restores and recovery, and keep one off-site where it isn’t
subject to the same physical threats (lightning, flood, theft, and the
like). Remember that the rule of three is a practical minimum—an extra
copy here and there won’t hurt.
If
you don’t think you’ll remember to back up regularly, pay for an
automated backup program such as Genie Timeline to do it for you.The classic example of a trinity backup is the aforementioned Method
B: the original data on your PC or laptop, the first backup on an
external hard drive that’s disconnected and stored safely when not in
use, and a third copy safely harbored at an online storage service.
The more modern version is Method A, which assumes that the online
service you use is properly backed up in multiple geographical
locations. That should give you your three copies, but for the sake of
paranoia—with a nod to corporate short-sightedness—we’ll assume the
third copy is on your local computer and maintained by the online
service’s app.
What to back up
Before you can know how you should best back up, you must know what
you need to back up. The choice is ultimately yours, but I recommend
protecting anything you might want or require later that you can’t
re-create: electronic documents (tax stuff, business stuff, any hard
copies you’ve scanned and discarded), artistic creations, memorabilia
(photos, videos, your old band recordings), or pretty much anything
whose loss would evoke extreme negative emotions. Wondering about your
downloaded movies, music, and other purchased media? You can always
download those items again later, though if you’re ambitious enough you
can back them up as well. I don’t bother. Note that If your data is
spread over multiple devices, you’ll need to consolidate it. More on
that later.
If
you’re going through the trouble to rip all of your movies to your PC,
make sure you back ’em up so that effort doesn’t go to waste!Though not strictly necessary, it is especially convenient to have a
complete backup of your desktop or laptop (ideally with your
mobile-device data on board), as described in Method B. It’s by far the
quickest and easiest way to restore your operating system, applications,
and data, should your system succumb to hard-drive failure or a malware
attack. This procedure is referred to as disaster recovery,
and it requires a boot disc/flash drive created by the backup/recovery
software. Without a disaster-recovery backup, you’ll wind up restoring
the operating system and applications individually from scratch.
Where to back it up
This is an easy one. I’m going out on a limb here and guessing that
you don’t have a tape backup drive. You may not even have an optical
drive. If you do, there’s nothing wrong with keeping a backup or two on
disc, but that’s your concern. I think old technology that slows down
the process stifles motivation.
If your broadband connection has enough upstream bandwidth, back up
to an online file-hosting service. Using such a service is pay-to-play,
but costs a fraction of what it costs to recover data from a failed hard
drive. It’s also ridiculously easy—you just set it and forget it.
Obviously, many people don’t have sufficient upstream bandwidth, or a
data set small enough to make the online option viable as a complete
solution. In that case, reduce your backup set (what you select to back
up—don’t remove the data itself) to the bare minimum, keep it online,
and then back up the rest locally using storage drives you attach to
your computer or network.
ROBERT CARDINNAS boxes such as the Western Digital My Book Live are great for storing your backups remotely.For local backups, use an external USB 3.0/eSATA/FireWire/Thunderbolt
drive, or if the data set is small, use a USB 3.0 flash drive, also
known as a thumb drive. Use two drives and alternate between them if you
don’t plan to back up online, or ideally, even if you do. With
hard-drive space costing about 5 cents a gigabyte, and flash costing
about 60 cents per gigabyte currently, you can afford it. Don’t use USB
2.0 unless you have to: It’s slow—and once again, older technology
demotivates.
Alternatively, you could use a network-attached storage box. Gigabit
ethernet is as fast as USB 3.0, and a NAS box lets you back up multiple
computers on a network without having to drag a box from location to
location. Most NAS boxes support rsync, which allows you to
mirror one to another in a remote location (such as your aunt’s house)—a
possible alternative to online backup.
How to back it up
Ah, the nitty-gritty. Here’s how to back up once you have your backup
repository (a hard drive or other device) and/or service in place.
First, select your disaster-recovery and backup software. Windows 7
and 8 both offer integrated applications that can create complete
system-recovery images, though in Windows 8 it’s somewhat hidden under Control Panel > All Items > Windows 7 File Recovery.
Alas, the restore routine isn’t particularly robust, and it can fail
with as simple a change in hardware as replacing your hard drive with a
smaller solid-state drive. In this case, you can still have the PC mount
the system image as a virtual hard drive, but only after reinstalling
the operating system manually. A surer bet is to use a third-party tool,
such as Acronis True Image or R-Drive Image, that isn’t as fragile when
it comes to restoring to different hardware.
The latest version of Acronis True Image does a decent job of walking you through the backup process.Once you decide on the software, the basic procedure is as follows:
Run the software.
Select the destination for the system backup. This will be the
external drive you purchased as a backup repository, a NAS box, or even a
shared location on another PC.
Select the partitions (C:, D:, or the like) that you want to back
up. You should select all of them the first time around, excluding the
destination drive for the backup. (Most backup software prevents you
from selecting the destination partition/drive.)
Run the backup process.
When the process is finished, put the backup media in a safe place (if applicable).
Create your recovery media (CD/DVD/thumb drive).
For backing up just your data, Windows has its own capable backup
application, but you can find dozens of backup programs that are easier
or more versatile, including notables such as Acronis Backup &
Recovery and True Image, Easeus Todo Backup, Genie Timeline Backup,
and NovaBackup. If you’re using an online service, the service will
provide a backup application. Most of the time it’ll create a local
backup on your external hard drive at the same time it backs up online.
Genie’s Timeline utility walks you gently through the backup process.If you want something more along the lines of Apple’s elegant and
easy-to-use Time Machine (which combines full system backup with data
backup), Genie Timeline may be what you seek. You’ll also find
continuous backup products, such as Stardock’s KeepSafe, which perform a
full data backup (no OS or applications) and then look for and back up
changed files at short intervals (such as every 5 minutes). If your data
set changes quickly (or if you don’t like scheduling backups), you can
opt for real-time backup. NTI’s Shadow, for instance, performs a full
backup, after which it hooks to the operating system and saves files as
they change.
After you’ve installed your software, follow these steps:
Run the software.
Select the files and folders you want to back up.
Select the destination for the system backup. This will be the
external drive you purchased as a backup repository, a NAS box, a shared
location on another PC, and/or your online backup service.
Run the backup process. (Make a full backup of all your data the first time.)
Verify the backup.
When the backup process is finished, put the backup media in a safe place (if applicable).
Repeat as necessary—daily, weekly, or monthly, depending on how often things change and how risk-averse you are.
Tip: After your initial full backup, perform incremental backups (backing up only the changes since the last backup) or differential backups
(backing up all changed files since the initial full backup) to save
time. Start over with a new full backup once a week if you’re backing up
daily, once a month if you’re backing up weekly, or once every four to
six months if you’re backing up monthly. Note: Never, ever delete the old backup until the new one is finished.
Step 7 and the tip above describe what are affectionately known as backup methodologies.
There are far more complex ones, but complexity, like slow technology,
demotivates. (Unless, of course, you’re being paid a lot to back up
something. I’m guessing you’re not, if you’re reading this primer.)
Getting the data off your devices
Although free online backup and storage space is available for each
major mobile platform (5GB for iOS/iCloud, 15GB for Android/Google
Drive, 7GB for Windows Phone/SkyDrive), centralizing the data from all
your devices can be a tad more complicated. With Google Drive and
SkyDrive, you get local copies of your files on your PC if you install
their respective apps. Just add those files to your list of locations to
back up, and you’re golden. Or, you can simply copy stuff over from the
appropriate folder when the device is attached to your PC via USB.
If you carry an Apple device, you have to use iCloud to extract your data.The same is true with iOS, to a point. Apple’s implementation of
iCloud is currently, let’s just say, different. Depending on the app
involved, you may need to sync its data or docs using iTunes, or you
might have to use whatever online storage option the app employs
(Dropbox is common) and then copy the items onto your PC from there.
Consolidating data for imaging
Some users (including yours truly) prefer backing up to image files,
largely because it’s easy to mount such files as virtual hard drives for
simple browsing and recovery. However, to make this approach feasible,
you need to consolidate all the data to be backed up onto one dedicated
partition—say, “D:” for “Data.”
You can redirect all the “My” folders (My Documents, My Photos, My
Videos, and so on) to this partition. Quite often, you can also redirect
individual programs that normally store information in the hidden
Users\Username\AppData folder. Of course, there’s always some
piece of software that won’t play nice: Google Drive and SkyDrive
folders, as well as iTunes backups of your iOS devices, can’t be
relocated. Someday.
The promised motivational speech
Due to its high incidence of profanity, I can’t link you to the most
famous lost-data support call in history. But I can summarize: A user
sent in a laptop to have a motherboard replaced, and the company
replaced the hard drive. With no backup of what was apparently a
two-year project, the user goes on one of the greatest answering-machine
tirades in history. I’ve never found out whether the user got the hard
drive back or whether the drive had failed.
How would you feel if your Great American Novel disappeared, or if
your wedding video or pictures of lost relatives vanished? Your term
paper? Your tax data when the IRS comes calling? Use your imagination
and channel whatever sense of dread you possess for motivation. Back up.
Now. Yes, now.
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