Remembering to Backup: Step-by-Step
Our data is everywhere! There is the data on your PC, laptop, netbook, phone, PDA, Media Center, online… you get the idea. Just thinking about putting a backup system in place can cause a serious headache, but even worse is the prospect of losing that data. This short guide is designed to help walk you through the process of creating a backup system that you actually will use.
OVERALL STRATEGY
First, you need to answer the following question: What would be the worst case scenario if I lost all of my digital data? If you don’t like the answer, you now have the motivation you need to continue this exercise.
Now that you have determined the purpose and established some motivation, we next need to figure out where all the data you care about is located and what to do with it.
COLLECTION
Now, you will brain storm and discover all the places where you have data that is important to you. Use a spreadsheet (you will build on it later) to capture this information and then use the following memory jog list to discover all the locations where your data lives.
Memory Jog List:
- Emails: All of the places where you check email.
- Contacts: Both the contacts on your PIM (e.g. Outlook) and on mobile devices such as your phone or PDA.
- Calendars: Every place where you store calendar information. (I recommend you use one master calendar)
- Tasks, Project Information: Both your own personal task lists and those where you collaborate with others.
- Documents and Notes: All of the documents that are stored locally, plus those that you may have saved online.
- Bookmarks: If you are using Firefox, check out www.foxmarks.com.
- Online Services: Do you use any online services where you have an account? (e.g. Google Docs, FaceBook, Live.com) [are these stored locally?]
- Application Files: If you use software applications, such as Photoshop, you may have files related to those programs on your computer. You should also back up your application disks.
- Video Games: Any saved game data files and the game disks.
- Multimedia: All of your music, photos and videos.
NOW BACKUP
For mobile devices such as your PDA or phone, I suggest you backup to your PC. Then your PDA and/or Phone data gets backed up with your PC.
For data at home such as on your PC’s, iTunes Library and X-Box 360, the solution is rather simple. You can use a centralized backup solution that is automated. This type of solution plugs into your home network independent of any computer and is a central place to store backed up data as well as other files you wish to share. Western Digital has a home centralized backup solution that is able to take care of all your backup needs easily. Plus, their software allows for remote access, so you can backup even when you are on the road.
As additional piece of mind I also suggest that you use an online backup solution like Mozy.com on a monthly basis. By adding an automated monthly online backup you protect your data in case of a disaster at home.
SHARE WITH US YOUR BACKUP PLAN
I hope this post has motivated you to put together your own backup plan that makes it fairly painless to execute.
Have you already mastered the art of backup? Did you find any cases where you could not backup? Please share your backup stories with us in the comments.
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- Backing up data just got easier
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Comments
Vin | NaturalBias.com
I think an external hard drive is a great way to back up data, and they’re relatively cheap now.
Because of viruses, spyware, bad software and clutter, computers get slow. Every so often, I reinstall everything from scratch. By using an external hard drive as my regular hard drive, I don’t have to worry about losing data when I do this.
I also use a second external hard drive to periodically back up the first and store it in a safe.
Brad
So far I’ve found a backup solution that works great for me:
Time Machine + Drobo.
Time Machine backs up my stuff every hour, and Drobo keeps multiple redundant copies of that backup data.
I even had a chance to try it out a few weeks ago. The motor in my hard drive died, and it refused to spin up. Once I got it replaced and booted it up again Time Machine asked me if I wanted to restore from a previous backup, and within an hour I was exactly where I left off. (minus cache and temp files)
It doesn’t offer much protection in case of a fire or something, with no off-site storage, but I’m looking into that.
Mike Panic
@Brad – I agree 100%, but a Drobo is a serious investment that most casual home computer users wouldn’t think of making, and while I am a Mac user, something like 90% of all home based computers are still running Windows, even higher in the business world.
James Krunk
A much cheaper method is to use an online backup company such as http://www.myotherdrive.com who offers a 2.99 and a 4.99 solution. I store all my files there no that they have encryption and an unattended backup solution.
Mike Panic
@James Krunk – Not to try a whole debate and take this off topic, but how is that site cheaper? A 2TB drive, like shown in this article’s example costs maybe $200, and it can be accessed from several computers on your home network. The site you mention charges $9.95 / month for 500gb of bandwidth, or 25% of what a hard drive in your house would cost. Higher plans they don’t even have prices listed. That’s $120 / year.
Also, I’m on a FiOS connection, my download speed is a steady 10 Mbs, that’s fast for internet but pails in comparison to the 100 Mbs speed my local area network works at. I couldn’t imagine backing up large files and accessing them on a regular basis over the internet. I also don’t feel comfy with my personal information on someone elses servers, so I would be much happier just using an NAS device.
James Krunk
@Mike Panic – I’m not against aNAS device. When I was saying it was cheaper, I was talking about for offsite storage. I have a NAS that takes the backups from all my computers, but I need that data offsite in case something happens at work (lightning, theft, etc). I used to this with tape backups and a security box at my bank, but for $9.99 / month I backup all my data online now.
I set up my account on http://www.myotherdrive.com to encrypt the data so noone but me can see the data.
I also notice on my nightly backups that http://www.myotherdrive.com only sends changed files to their servers. For me that is maybe 20-40 files a night so the 10Mbs (my connection is only 756K upload) vs. 100Mbs becomes less of an issue.