:tiphat:A friendly reminder to go through your system and ensure you have a backup of all the important stuff.. This can really be as simple as a 10-minute drag-n-drop operation for important files.
For near bulletproof backup (from a home user's perspective) you should image to an external drive, and use a rescue disc to create and restore that image. Optionally make 2 copies and store one of them off-site; perhaps at a relative's house, a bank vault, or stuff it in a baggie and bury it in the ground. This will protect against natural disasters, the worst kinds of mal-ware, theft, your own stupidity, hardware failures, and a host of other unforeseen circumstances.
But most important of all is to actually test your ability to image and restore. If you don't feel like practicing "live" on your operational system, get a second drive and restore to that and check it out. A backup is totally worthless if you can't access it.
Good practices suggest keeping your USER DATA separate from the OS and APPLICATIONS. This means your main system drive has all the applications and os. And the second drive has all your work output and pictures and music and projects and stuff like that. Both are to be backed up on a schedule you can live with. I tend to like this philosophy because I can recover from a crash or problem quickly without affecting years worth of work. Also you can move all your information to a new system quite quickly without the burden of having to search and separate it piecemeal.
As a side note, it's good practice to keep copies of applications, whether you downloaded them or purchased them or whatever. This will come in handy if and when you need to spot-reinstall or redo an app for any reason. Not to mention getting a new computer. Everything's all at hand and set to go. No fuss'n'fumbling.
For the past 30+ years I've kept at the ready in some form or other:
1- OS install disc
2- Boot disc
3- Rescue disc with disk imager and file sync program.
4- Applications, games, utilities, downloads, tools.. all original files.
5- User data, pictures, music, journal, projects, documents..etc.
6- Working HDD image, ready to restore at a moments notice.
7- Offsite(!) backup of special individual files done at a semi-regular interval.
Everyone will have their own style and requirements. This can be as simple as drag'n'drop op, or as complex as a megacorp operation spanning multiple datacenters. For me I just use an imager, windows explorer, and a file sync program. However you choose to do it is your choice. Go with what works best. The key take away point here is to have 2 copies of anything you don't want to lose!
For near bulletproof backup (from a home user's perspective) you should image to an external drive, and use a rescue disc to create and restore that image. Optionally make 2 copies and store one of them off-site; perhaps at a relative's house, a bank vault, or stuff it in a baggie and bury it in the ground. This will protect against natural disasters, the worst kinds of mal-ware, theft, your own stupidity, hardware failures, and a host of other unforeseen circumstances.
But most important of all is to actually test your ability to image and restore. If you don't feel like practicing "live" on your operational system, get a second drive and restore to that and check it out. A backup is totally worthless if you can't access it.
Good practices suggest keeping your USER DATA separate from the OS and APPLICATIONS. This means your main system drive has all the applications and os. And the second drive has all your work output and pictures and music and projects and stuff like that. Both are to be backed up on a schedule you can live with. I tend to like this philosophy because I can recover from a crash or problem quickly without affecting years worth of work. Also you can move all your information to a new system quite quickly without the burden of having to search and separate it piecemeal.
As a side note, it's good practice to keep copies of applications, whether you downloaded them or purchased them or whatever. This will come in handy if and when you need to spot-reinstall or redo an app for any reason. Not to mention getting a new computer. Everything's all at hand and set to go. No fuss'n'fumbling.
For the past 30+ years I've kept at the ready in some form or other:
1- OS install disc
2- Boot disc
3- Rescue disc with disk imager and file sync program.
4- Applications, games, utilities, downloads, tools.. all original files.
5- User data, pictures, music, journal, projects, documents..etc.
6- Working HDD image, ready to restore at a moments notice.
7- Offsite(!) backup of special individual files done at a semi-regular interval.
Everyone will have their own style and requirements. This can be as simple as drag'n'drop op, or as complex as a megacorp operation spanning multiple datacenters. For me I just use an imager, windows explorer, and a file sync program. However you choose to do it is your choice. Go with what works best. The key take away point here is to have 2 copies of anything you don't want to lose!