I'm interested in utilities, free or paid, for backing up a drive to another drive on a network (or a USB drive). I am not talking about cloud backup here (that's another discussion). I have been using GFI backup (free) for many years, but I think it's an unsupported product now, and that makes me nervous.
I searched all over the internet for reviews of free and paid software, and it's disappointing how everything seems to have major problems. I need REALLY SOLID software with a good interface to trust my data to it.
My main requirement, besides that fact that the software is well-enough designed that I can trust it to work when the chips are down, is the ability to keep several old versions of a file and of course a usable interface for browsing those versions and choosing what to restore. Also keeping deleted files. I don't put a high priority on image backups.
My most common use case is the need to look at older versions of a file that I might have changed by accident. My second most common use case is the desire to restore everything to a certain date. I don't expect complete failure of my main drive to happen very often, so quick recovery to new hardware (i.e. imaging) is not a priority.
Here is a really simple restore capability that works well: choose the date that I want to restore to. Restore every file to its state as of that date.
Here are bad ideas. (1) choose which version file-by file. I've got 50,000 files, no thanks. (2) choose globally whether you want the most recent version of every file, the second-most recent of every file, the third-most recent, etc. This is a terrible idea (yet iDrive does it this way) because that's not what one needs in an actual problem situation-- your file data as of May 1 might be the most recent version of some files, and the second-most of other files, and so on.
Here is another bad idea (GFI backup has this problem): keep every old version forever, or give you only a clunky control for "cleaning up" old versions. Jungle Disk is much better (but that's an online service, just giving a sense here of what it does): you have all sorts of control over how many versions of each file are kept, the maximum amount of space to devote to versions, the maximum length of time to keep them, etc.
So here are some programs I looked at:
Ones I'm not sure about, need to research.
Any ideas welcome. Also how should I go about searching for possibilities and reviews? Amazon sells a few backup programs and seems to be a good source for comments on how the software works when the boots hit the ground.
I searched all over the internet for reviews of free and paid software, and it's disappointing how everything seems to have major problems. I need REALLY SOLID software with a good interface to trust my data to it.
My main requirement, besides that fact that the software is well-enough designed that I can trust it to work when the chips are down, is the ability to keep several old versions of a file and of course a usable interface for browsing those versions and choosing what to restore. Also keeping deleted files. I don't put a high priority on image backups.
My most common use case is the need to look at older versions of a file that I might have changed by accident. My second most common use case is the desire to restore everything to a certain date. I don't expect complete failure of my main drive to happen very often, so quick recovery to new hardware (i.e. imaging) is not a priority.
Here is a really simple restore capability that works well: choose the date that I want to restore to. Restore every file to its state as of that date.
Here are bad ideas. (1) choose which version file-by file. I've got 50,000 files, no thanks. (2) choose globally whether you want the most recent version of every file, the second-most recent of every file, the third-most recent, etc. This is a terrible idea (yet iDrive does it this way) because that's not what one needs in an actual problem situation-- your file data as of May 1 might be the most recent version of some files, and the second-most of other files, and so on.
Here is another bad idea (GFI backup has this problem): keep every old version forever, or give you only a clunky control for "cleaning up" old versions. Jungle Disk is much better (but that's an online service, just giving a sense here of what it does): you have all sorts of control over how many versions of each file are kept, the maximum amount of space to devote to versions, the maximum length of time to keep them, etc.
So here are some programs I looked at:
- Built-in Windows backup. Doesn't appear to support file versioning.
- Acronis True Image. The first sign these folks can't design software is that their website is terrible. But what makes it really out of the question is that they charge $20 for per-incident support. They say they refund your money if the problem is their fault, but we all know that many real-life problems are not actually bugs in the software, just difficulties that are difficult to troubleshoot, so I doubt they often assign the blame to themselves.
- NTI backup. A reviewer on Amazon says he was getting generic errors with no indication what was causing the error. It took him a long time to trace it. It turns out that some of his files weren't getting backed up, silently. And this is a paid product!
- Genie Timeline. Everyone who reviews this calls it "easy to use" and "doesn't have pages of complicated settings." I'm a power user, so this probably won't cut it. If it truly does what I want, then great, but I should probably focus elsewhere.
- Areca. Open source free software. Doesn't does VSS shadow copying, meaning it can't back up any files in use.
- Genie Backup Manager Professional. It has nearly 50% 1-star reviews on Amazon thanks to its lovely tendency to omit files from your backup.
- There are a number of open-source backup programs which require both client and server processes and have lots and lots of enterprise-type features, but it's not clear they are practical for the home user, or can even do anything I want.
Ones I'm not sure about, need to research.
- Comodo (free if you don't get the online storage). The "features" page doesn't mention versioning, so it's a good bet it doesn't have it, but I'm not sure.
- Norton Security. I don't want most of this, but it does include backup. Not sure if the backup can be used independently. Not sure what its capabilities are. Probably not a lot of backup capability as it's a bundled product with the emphasis on non-backup capabilities like anti-virus. Also there is no "try before you buy" and very little written about what it can actually do.
- Paragon Home. Seems to be oriented to disk imaging. No discussion on the website of file versioning, but lots of advanced features related to imaging.
Any ideas welcome. Also how should I go about searching for possibilities and reviews? Amazon sells a few backup programs and seems to be a good source for comments on how the software works when the boots hit the ground.
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