One of my biggest fears is that I will some how loose all the pictures that I’ve taken over the past six years. Many of these pictures are irreplaceable. Like pictures from the birth of my son or pictures from when my wife and I went to Europe. Needless to say, I’d feel horrible if I lost even one picture from my collection. With that being said, I’ve been pretty good about backing things up. In the past I would backup my pictures to an external USB drive. I would also backup to a DVD at the end of each year. Both of these backup techniques have a number of shortfalls. My external hard drive wouldn’t save me if I were to have a fire in my house or if my computer were some how damaged. My DVD backup system was a little better in that I stored offsite at my parents however, backing up to a DVD is a lengthy process which requires me to be proactive. Needless to say, months would go by without me backing up to the DVD simply because I would forget.
Recently my hosting company increased my storage capacity to 55 Gigabytes at the same time, they also increased my bandwidth to 999 Gigabytes of transfer per month. Being the big geek that I am, I immediately saw this as an opportunity for me to backup my pictures to a remote location which is hopefully better protected from power failures and fires then my computer. With the help of SyncBackSE, I now have a safe and secure backup of all 23 GBs of my pictures. SyncBack is great because it allows me to schedule ftp backups while I’m asleep. I currently have Syncback setup so that it copies any new pictures to my hosting account at 1 AM est. It took me nearly a week to get everything transferred (due to my internet connection dropping and slow upload speeds) but now things are going smooth. I really think this process will work out great for me. I’m still backing up to my external hard drive as well as the DVDs but, now I’m not as worried tha I will somehow loose all of my precious data.
PS: In case you can’t tell, I would highly recommend SyncBack to just about anybody. The software has some many features that it makes a geek like me smile. If you’re a cheapskate and you don’t want to spend $25 for the full version, you can even download a copy of the free version which includes most of the features found in the $25 version.
How do you backup your precious data?
December 28th, 2006 at 2:06 pm
I use Syncback at home & work - mainly just to back up from my personal workstation to a centralized server. I never thought of backing up to my web site. I will have to try it. Thanks.
December 29th, 2006 at 7:29 am
I use Acronis True Image to take periodic snapshots of my computer. I have an early, clean image on DVDs and more recent images on an external drive. I also have my photos and tunes backed up to DVD and external drive. But, I need to move copies of these personal backups off site. After the CES nuttiness dies down and I get a new computer, I should put something similar in place.
June 11th, 2007 at 8:48 pm
[...] looks like a nice piece of hardware. I think I am going to pick one up for my backup solution. My current backup drive (160GB) is running out of [...]
January 23rd, 2008 at 10:55 pm
[...] my Mac however, I’d like to implement a remote backup strategy similar to what I’ve implemented on my Windows box. Right now, I’m looking into either using JungleDisk (Amazon S3) or rsync over [...]