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What backup program should I use?

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Summary: Backing up your computer's data is critical. What program should you use? There are many, but the best is which ever one you actually will use.

What backup program should I use?

Doing backups is kind of like eating healthier; everyone agrees we should and yet very few of us actually do. Much like the heart attack victim who no longer visits McDonald's the most religious users of backup procedures are those who've been bitten hard by a failure in their past.

Asking what backup program to use is very much like asking "what's the best exercise program?" The best program for exercise or backup is whatever one you'll actually do.

Do you know how you'd recover your data should your computer crash?

In order to choose what's right for you, there are several questions you should be asking yourself.

Do I want to put a lot of thought into this? If not then prepare to spend a little more money for some additional disk space and get one of the stock backup programs. I'm currently quite pleased with my external USB/Firewire Maxtor drive and while I run my own custom backup (more on that below), it comes with Retrospectwhich is a respected backup package.

Am I comfortable re-installing my system if something goes wrong or do I want the backup to take care of that? This is one of those comfort versus space tradeoffs. If you're ok with re-installing your system, and that means your operating system as well as applications and customizations and you can clearly identify what does and doesn't need to be saved, then you can save a lot of disk space by backing up only your data. This requires some amount of diligence on your part because anything you don't specify to whatever backup program you use will be lost in the case of a catstrophic failure.

Is there another machine nearby? Quite often you don't even have to go out of your way to get additional hardware for backup purposes. Hard disks are so large these days that quite often simply having another machine on your network with sufficient free space can be a quick and easy solution. Many backup packages will allow you to backup across a network. Having two machines each back up to the other is a quick way to ensure that if either has a problem your data is safe on the other.

How valuable is what you're doing? As much as we hate to think of it we should: what if your building including your machines and all their backups were lost in a fire? If the potential data loss just sent a shiver down your spine then you should be considering off-site data storage for your backups. That could mean burning a CD or DVD periodically and leaving it at some other location or if the sizes are small enough or backing up across the network to some server not in your home.

How important is incremental access? By incremental access I mean; how important is it that you be able to recover a file from a specific day and not a day before or after? If you simply back up all your files on top of previous versions you'll only have the most recent version. In many many cases that's enough. In some cases it's not such as needing to recover an older version of a file that became corrupt at some point.

What resources should I backup? Have you thought of all your computers? All the drives therein? How about external hard drives you're not using for backup? Do you have a web site? Do you have a backup of it? What would happen if your ISP "lost" it? (It's happened.) If you're a small business, do you have databases that need backing up? Office machines that belong to everyone but no one?

Let's use myself as an example for those questions:

  • I've put a lot of thought into this. And I should; it's my profession to do so and my business relies on it. In my case I use my own scripts written in Perl and leveraging a tool I wrote many years ago called SyncFile.
  • I'm very comfortable re-installing everything so I backup only my data. Even so, just last week I discovered an overlooked directory that cost me a couple of hours time when I had to reconstruct a missing file. That directory is now part of my backup. Am I missing more? I hope not.
  • I have several machines on my LAN in the middle of the night there is a flurry of activity as data gets copied from one machine to another and another, each using at least one other as a backup.
  • What I do for my business, and my wife's is definitely valuable and worthy of off-site backup. My solution is actually fairly simple - with computers at two different physical locations I have two external Maxtor drives - each location backs up to the external drive and roughly once a week we swap the drives.
  • I do have external servers as well. For example the web site you're probably reading this on resides on a server hundreds of miles from my office. So I've been careful to ensure that it too is backed up in some appropriate way.

I also recommend picking up a copy of 10 Quick Steps to Perfect Backups. This is a good, quick overview of simple, "back-it-all-up" strategies, and can get you up and backing-up quickly.

The bottom line for backup is simple: just do it. Understand what you have and what you're willing to invest in but do something.

Before it's too late.

Update: I now formally recommend Acronis True Image for most home users. But ultimately which program you use - within reason - isn't nearly as important as simply having some backup strategy and sticking to it.

Article 152 | Posted February 15, 2004

Recent Comments
47 Comments

Professor Asus' comments (postd jan 4'08) were *so*helpful!! i just bought a simpletech external harddrive (320gb) and was checking out the data backup software that it came with (arcsoft total media backup & record). it has an seemingly easy interface but i was starting to get pretty frustrated trying to understand how to backup and what to backup. i looked up the Acronis True Image software that Prof Asus recommended and it sounds like exactly what i want. thanks! http://disk-imaging-software-review.toptenreviews.com/acronis-true-image-review.html

Posted by: lb at February 3, 2008 4:23 PM

Dear, Leo
Can I and if so can I just backup windows updates? Is the NTBackup Backup/Restore that comes with windows ok for home backup? I have only one computer for home use Windows XP Home SP2.
Thanks,

Don

Posted by: Don Clark at March 15, 2008 6:34 AM

Leo, can I use the Internet via DSL, to copy data files from my laptop (Vista) to my desktop PC (WinXP-SP2) or vice-versa? Using what program?
I have mostly photos, under 1000.

Posted by: Bill Cartledge at March 16, 2008 7:15 PM

Hi Leo.
I am looking for a backup software that can make a different daily backup of some selected data for a week and start after to overwrite the first once again. So that I could go a little back in the backup in case I lost some data. Could you advice me a product? Thanks a lot! Christian ;)

Posted by: Christian Meid at June 5, 2008 3:29 PM

In reading this series of comments, I went to check my own software, PCCloneEx, since I had never really tried to restore anything with it. The program seems to work, but when it restores files it leaves them in a zipped format. I know I can simply unzip it, but are there back-up programs that will restore the file in its native format?

Thanks,

HG

Most backup programs actually restore to original format. Restoring only .zip is ... unusual.

-Leo

Posted by: Harrison Gardner at July 31, 2008 12:15 PM

I have backed up my Windows XP and Office on a 16GB Flash Drive. If my hard drive fails, can I just boot from the Flash Drive, then copy all the backed-up files to the replacement drive? Or, will I need some interim step?

It really depends on how you're backing up. Some backup programs will do as you describe, but most do not. You'll likely need some kind of interim boot disk at a minimum.

-Leo

Posted by: Richard Goodman at August 23, 2008 5:43 PM

Acronis only restores to the backed up computer. I want backup software that will backup to a new computer. If mine crashes I will purchase a new computer. What program should I use? Thanks. Jay

I'm not aware of a *backup* program that will do what you're asking for. Moving software from one computer to another is typically way more complex than just putting the files from one computer onto another.

My recommendation for setting up a new computer is that you set it up ... install everything for that computer on that computer. Then transfer data - perhaps using your backups. Most backup programs work fine for that.
- Leo
05-Oct-2008

Posted by: Jay at October 4, 2008 9:19 AM

Restoring to a new computer seems to be like doing illegal copies of your OS.
But what if your hard disk crashes? I had to deal with that problem: I had a 80GB hd and it crashes. Hd I could buy was 200GB. Backup programs simply made a first partition but I loose 120GB. I had to reinstall all to be able to use the whole disk.
Is there a backup program able to do this tasks?

Posted by: Victor at November 9, 2008 6:31 AM

I recently bought Acronis, because of recommendations here, to use on my wife's laptop, Vista OS, and the program comes back with a failure window every way we have tried to make a drive image whether onto a USB external drive, networked computer, or network drive. Acronis will make backups of e-mails and docs but it is very slow. Their support is not only slow but has been unable to provide a workable answer for image making failure and a password problem getting onto the network drive. They suggested using router password for the later.
I think I am going to trash Acronis and buy new Ghost program which (Version 9)has worked for years on my desktop computer. I do regular backups of data but want regular full drive images in case of drive failures, of wich I've had only three in twenty five years of computers. I probably should consider myself very lucky.

Posted by: Bob at December 9, 2008 1:48 PM

If I back up everything then am I not risking backing up, and then restoring, the bad stuff? Not just something catastrophic like a virus but all the registry crud that might be slowing me down?


(If I'm worried about a hard drive crash, or a fire, I would want to restore to everything exactly as it was.)


I suppose I should buy the program and try out the settings. Besides my data (and I can copy that easily enough) I'll want various applications, and also various settings (I've got my start menu and my desktop just the way I like them.) How do I back up and restore the good while leaving the bad?

A backup program is not a cleaning tool. It's purpose is to save and restore files, or your entire system, to a previous state. So this concept of "restoring the good but not the bad" isn't really looking at what the tool is supposed to be about.

So if you need to restore an entire system, then that's what you should expect, the entire system as of the time you took the backup. That's the point.

Most all backups also allow you to restore individual files, so in cases where you don't need to restore everything, you can pick and chose individual files to recover from your backup.

But if you're trying to clean your system, other methods are much more appropriate.
- Leo
31-Dec-2008

Posted by: David Chesler at December 30, 2008 9:17 AM

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