A really good backup strategy

barend

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Having tried many backup programs, but none is really reliable.
Particulary flaky appears Acronis 10: after a crash I selected only F: in files restore (backup medium = ext hdd P and it happily restored ALL partitions as folders in F: which did not really fit. :eek:
So I had to enlarge the partition first...!

My strategy is making a full c:\ image twice a week, and daily incremental backups to my external hdd.

Can anyone advise on a proggie that's:
- easy to use and automatic
- working in W7
- supports "suspended file" backups (no restarting to DOS or whatever)
- really reliable
 
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My Computer

OS
Windows 7
macrium reflect free version it takes a system image and it has the option to make a luinx rescuse cd so you can restore and get files it works for me.
 

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HP Pavilion p6795a
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windows 7 64 bit
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intel core i5 3.30GHz Quad Core
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HP
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6gb
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AMD RADEON HD 6450 1GB Dedicated
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ATI HIGH DEFINITION SOUND
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LG
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16:9 Hd
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1TB
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Fan
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Beast Of A Machine!
I know you had problems with Acronis 10, but I'm using Acronis 2010 and it has worked perfectly for me. I've used the restore function 3 times now. Once to restore my boot C: drive and the other two times to restore my E: drive where I keep all my downloads.

Macrium Free works well but does not have some of the features I like in Acronis.
 

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Lenovo IdeaCenter 450
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Windows 10 Pro X64
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Intel Quad Core i7-4770 @ 3.4Ghz
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16.0GB PC3-12800 DDR3 SDRAM 1600 MHz
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Intel Integrated HD Graphics
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Realtek HD Audio
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HP 22" LCD
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250GB Samsung EVO SATA-3 SSD
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Dell USB
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Cable via Road Runner 3MB Upload, 30MB Download
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Windows Defender, MBAM Pro, MBAE
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Seamonkey
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UEFI/GPT
PLDS DVD-RW DH16AERSH
Only the paid version of Macrium Reflect have that featured "incremental backups".
 

My Computer

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PC/Desktop
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Custom Build
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Windows 7 Professional SP1 - x64 [Non-UEFI Boot]
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Ivy Bridge Core i5 3570K (Delidded)
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Asus P8Z77-V LE PLUS
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G.Skill "Ares" DDR3 PC3-12800 - 1600MHz (16Gb)
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Asus Dual-RX480-O4G
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Creative Sound Blaster Z w/5.1 sound system
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Asus IPS 23"
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16/9
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Internal:
500Go Sata 6Gb/s (x2)
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SSD 60Go Sata 6Gb/s
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In Win C 900W Series 80+ Platinum
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Cooler Master QuickFire XTi
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Razer Imperator 2012 (4G)
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"Raid0" with Intel Smart Response Technology (HDD/SSD)

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HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
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Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
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from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
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with trackball - no mices
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I know you asked for a program and it doesnt sound like the built in backup is what you want.
I have been using Windows Home Server for some time and love it. There are some good prebuilts out there, but I built mine from an old asus mb and athlon I had and was not using.
There are other benefits to a home server as well, and setup with multiple win 7 machines is easy.
 

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i7 930
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gigabyte x58a-ud3r
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ati 5850
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1920 x 1200
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ocz vertex 120
seagate 500s
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corsair 750
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antec 9
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bunch of big fans on low rpm
I use a couple of imaging tools.

My last install of Windows 7 I went on an imaging frenzy.

I installed Windows 7, and activated it. That's it. Imaged with the native Windows Image Backup so I have a vanilla install to fall back on just in case I update or change any of my current software.

Then I installed Paragon Drive Backup Pro(Which was being given away for free not long ago). Made another almost vanilla image, just in case I couldn't get the native Windows image to reload.

Then I installed Office 2010, made another image. Antivirus software was installed soon after, then another image was taken.

It might sound a little extreme, but I like multiple options to fall back on.

Besides all of the other Images I have stored, I let Paragon Pro do a daily image backup. Just so I have an image that's up to date and current.

So yeah, my strategy seems to be a little obsessive compulsive, but storage drives are cheap nowadays.
 

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Toshiba P300
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Windows 8 Pro
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Intel Centrino Dual Core P7450 2.13GHz
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4gb
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ATI Mobility Raedon HD3650
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Toshiba MK3252GSX ATA
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Wish it were faster
Haven't found ANY software that produced a recovery dvd that after booting recognized my e-sata drive.
Got sick of trying.
Bought a 500Gb internal in HDD and that works like a champ as backup medium.
Only a fire should not happen LOL.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7
Haven't found ANY software that produced a recovery dvd that after booting recognized my e-sata drive.
Got sick of trying.
Bought a 500Gb internal in HDD and that works like a champ as backup medium.
Only a fire should not happen LOL.
That is really strange. If your eSata drive has a drive letter, the recovery DVD should be able to recognize it. Did you try Macrium?
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
OS
Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
CPU
from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
Monitor(s) Displays
2x HP w2207
Hard Drives
5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
Keyboard
with trackball - no mices
Mouse
Trackball mice
Internet Speed
DSL 6000
http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/73828-imaging-free-macrium.html?ltr=I Btw: I avoid incrementals because if you lose one in the chain, you lose them all. It is also difficult to delete individual restore points. Disk space is so cheap these days, it is not worth it.

Yes that's a hazard.
But enormous backups slow down the PC too much imo.
What I learned from my "trials":
Don't trust ANY backup software on its face (or commercial blabla) value.
I am now thinking of backing up up one partition per day as a full image.
I chucked my e-sata drive, none of the recovery dvd's I tried sees it after booting.
Bought a cheap 500Gb internal HDD for backups.
Makes no real risk difference: I never bothered to put the external in my safe box anyway (and it would probably be unreadable after a fire- only very sophisticated vaults can take extreme heat).
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7
Haven't found ANY software that produced a recovery dvd that after booting recognized my e-sata drive.
Got sick of trying.
Bought a 500Gb internal in HDD and that works like a champ as backup medium.
Only a fire should not happen LOL.
That is really strange. If your eSata drive has a drive letter, the recovery DVD should be able to recognize it. Did you try Macrium?


Macrium: Same story.
The drive letter actually exists only in Windows (you don't see them in the bios).
Problem is of course what works in Windows does not necessarily work under some weird o/s (like an outlandish linux version or good old MSDOS) that's used for recovery disks.
All partition letters are garbled or mixed up.
I have found most recovery discs flaky at best.
Backup software MUST be reliable or they're a no-no.
Period.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7
But enormous backups slow down the PC too much imo.
They really don't. If you keep running Macrium in the background, you can continue doing most tasks with no impact - unless you want to do video editing at the same time. There is relatively little CPU time used - it is just that the disk channel is being kept busy which produces a small impact.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
OS
Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
CPU
from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
Monitor(s) Displays
2x HP w2207
Hard Drives
5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
Keyboard
with trackball - no mices
Mouse
Trackball mice
Internet Speed
DSL 6000
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