On 5/5/13 4:00 PM, Marty wrote:
> Just curious if you recommend the Mozbackup program or doing it manually.
>
I do it manually because I have non-Mozilla data that I want to backup.
I have two physical internal hard drives. Drive C contains software,
including Windows XP. Drive D contains data. I usually backup weekly,
using a three-week cycle:
Week #1: Total backup of non-Windows directories on Drive C,
incremental backup of the Windows directory on Drive C, and incremental
backup of non-photo data on Drive D.
Week #2: Incremental backup of non-Windows directories on Drive C,
total backup of the Windows directory on Drive C, and incremental backup
of non-photo data on Drive D.
Week #3: Incremental backup of non-Windows directories on Drive C,
incremental backup of the Windows directory on Drive C, and total backup
of non-photo data on Drive D.
This gives me a total and two incremental backups of each: non-Windows,
Windows, and data. I keep a full cycle plus a partial cycle of each.
When a partial cycle becomes full (total and two incrementals), it is
time to delete the older cycle and start a new cycle. Data from Drive C
is backed-up to Drive D and vice-versa.
In each week, I also do a total backup of my Desktop and System State
from Drive C as as single backup, keeping three.
I also backup photo files from Drive D when I have added some; this is a
cycle of four (total and three incrementals). And I backup from a flash
drive my accumulated software installer files, also using a cycle of
four; again, this is done only when I have added some.
Upon completion of a weekly backup task, I copy the photo and software
backups to a portable hard drive that I otherwise keep away from my PC.
I PGP-encrypt the Windows, non-Windows, and non-photo data backups and
move the encrypted files to the same portable.
No, I have never needed to use a backup to restore a failed disc.
However, I often use a backup to restore a file that I have so mangled
that I cannot undo the damage.
--
David E. Ross
<
http://www.rossde.com/>
Are taxes too high in the U.S.? Check the bar graph
at <
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