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Hi,
I would like to create a backup for my laptop. my hard disk is 60GB but the used space is 16GB . So can you tell me the best procedure to create a backup for my laptop. What i have done is i just try to copy all the folders in the C:\ to a data disc DVD but the disc could not be created and i also got the messsage that some softwares could not be written in to the DVD. So friends can you please tell me if there is a software or a procedure how to do a backup for a laptop. Thank you, Manoj |
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manoj wrote:
> I would like to create a backup for my laptop. my hard disk is 60GB > but the used space is 16GB . So can you tell me the best procedure to > create a backup for my laptop. What i have done is i just try to copy > all the folders in the C:\ to a data disc DVD but the disc could not > be created and i also got the messsage that some softwares could not > be written in to the DVD. So friends can you please tell me if there > is a software or a procedure how to do a backup for a laptop. The facxt that it's a laptop is largely irrelevant. Backup needs are normally no different for a laptop than for a desktop. Here's my standard blurb on bacup: First of all, almost everyone should be backing up regularly. It is always possible that a hard drive crash, user error, nearby lightning strike, virus attack, even theft of the computer, can cause the loss of everything on your drive. As has often been said, it's not a matter of whether you will have such a problem, but when. Essentially you should back up what you can't afford to lose--what you can't readily recreate. What that is depends on how you use your computer and what you use it for. It takes time and effort to backup, but it also takes time and effort to recreate lost data. If you back up daily, you should never have to recreate more than one day's worth of last data. If weekly, there's potentially a lot more to recreate. You should assess how much pain and trouble you would have if you lost x days of data, and then choose a backup frequency that doesn't involve more pain and trouble than that you would have if you had to recreate what was lost. At one extreme is the professional user who would likely go out of business if his data was lost. He probably needs to back up at least daily. At the other extreme is the kid who doesn't use his game except to play games. He probably needs no backup at all, since worst case he can easily reinstall his games. Most of us fall somewhere between those extremes, but nobody can tell you where you fall; you need to determine that for yourself. Should you back up Windows? Should you back up your applications? Most people will tell you no, since you can always reinstall these easily from the original media. But I don't think the answer is so clear-cut. Many people have substantial time and effort invested in customizing Windows and configuring their apps to work the way they want to. Putting all of that back the way it was can be a difficult, time-consuming effort. Whether you should backup up Windows and apps depends, once again, on you. How to backup? What software to use? There are many choices, including the Windows-supplied backup program. Which choice is best for you depends at least in part on the answers to some of the questions above. Finally what backup media should you choose, and how should it be stored? There are many choices, including CDs, tape, zip drives, and second hard drives. I don't recommend backup to a second non-removable hard drive because it leaves you susceptible to simultaneous loss of the original and backup to many of the most common dangers: severe power glitches, nearby lightning strikes, virus attacks, even theft of the computer. In my view, secure backup needs to be on removable media, and not kept in the computer. For really secure backup (needed, for example, if the life of your business depends on your data) you should have multiple generations of backup, and at least one of those generations should be stored off-site. My computer isn't used for business, but my personal backup scheme uses two identical removable hard drives,I alternate between the two, and use Drive Image to make a complete copy of the primary drive. -- Ken Blake - Microsoft MVP Windows: Shell/User Please reply to the newsgroup |
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