The personal disquiet of

Mark Boulton

February 14th, 2005

Backup solutions?

Yester­day even­ing, whilst get­ting to grips with a par­tic­u­larly tricky bit of design, Pho­toshop crashed. Wierd, pho­toshop hardly ever crashes on me. The dark days of OS 9 rose up within me like the morn­ing after a really good night. It sud­denly dawned on me I didn’t save my work for the last hour. Then it dawned on me again (there was a lot of dawn­ing last night), I don’t have a reli­able backup solution. 

Since last night i’ve been giv­ing this a bit of thought and quite a bit of research. I have the fol­low­ing kit at home. 

Neither the mac or the PC is backed up and now as my wife and I are a two iPod fam­ily, and the fact we mainly use Air­port Express to play music dir­ectly from iTunes (can’t remem­ber the last time I played a CD), we have a lot of music on these computers. 

Ideally, i’d like the PC and MAc backed up to a net­work hard drive and also have all our media stored on this drive as well — pho­tos, video and music. The clincher would be to have our iTunes lib­rar­ies remote on this drive and access­ible over the net­work when we launch iTunes, that way we keep all media in a cent­ral location. 

Backup solu­tions?

So, i’ve been look­ing around for a suit­able solu­tion to the hard­ware issue and i’ve found a solu­tion. The Lacie Eth­er­net Mini is a drive with an eth­er­net and USB port, which is then accessed over a local net­work and admin­istered via http. It comes in 250, 400 and 500 Gb mod­els. Max­tor and Iomega have sim­ilar solu­tions but I can’t find any­wa­here in the UK where they are as com­pet­it­ive as the Lacie.

So, i’ve got my hard­ware. I’ve got all my media on it. This is where I need your advice. I need to backup the media on the drive (par­ti­tion­ing might be an answer here). I also need to backup the work folder on a 60Gb PC and an 80Gb iMac and have remote iTunes lib­rar­ies. Here’s the questions: 

I’m amazed it’s taken this long for the industry to release a cheap net­work­able drive like this. But what I also find amaz­ing is the lack of robust, cheap backup soft­ware. Let me know your thoughts, I could do with your help!

5 Responses to “Backup solutions?”

  1. Dan Phiffer said on: February 15th, 2005 at 2:09 am

    RsyncX is a free OS X GUI that sits on top of the excel­lent Unix rsync util­ity. Be sure to try res­iz­ing the “Simple” win­dowto reveal addi­tional backup sources, a fea­ture that has no expli­cit afford­ance, mak­ing it easy to miss. This is help­ful: http://www.labf.org/~egon/mac_backup/

    As long as you have iTunes set up to not copy tracks to the iTunes music folder when you add them (in the advanced prefs), you should be able to ref­er­ence remote files across a net­work. Just drag ‘n drop from the Finder. 

    Not sure about the printer thing. Maybe just give it a try? 

    One other thought on backups: off-site backups should be part of the equa­tion. If you get burgled (or if there’s a fire), they’re going to get your backup drives too.

  2. Kenn said on: February 16th, 2005 at 3:15 am

    I use a solu­tion that takes RAID and off­s­ite backup to a neat and an inex­pens­ive con­clu­sion, check out rebyte.com

  3. Mark Boulton said on: February 16th, 2005 at 11:11 am

    Dan — thanks for that. RsyncX looks really inter­est­ing and it nicely provides an easy to use inter­face over Unix (which i’m really not famil­iar with) — i’ll give it a go when I get the drive in a couple of weeks. 

    Kenn — I’ve had a look at the site and it looks like an inter­est­ing altern­at­ive — i’ll cer­tainly bear it in mind.

  4. Matthew Geddert said on: May 13th, 2005 at 9:09 pm

    For win­dows the easi­est and cheapest way of doing this is with win­dows built in nat­ive backup soft­ware (start -> run -> ntbackup in win­dows 2000/XP) if you have win­dows XP its also some­where in the accessor­ies folder in the pro­grams menu. It is espe­cially nice that if your main com­puter dies any newer win­dows based com­puter can read your backup files. This soft­ware does incre­ment­als so you could do a full backup weekly and incre­mental dur­ing the week or some­thing like that. 

    I second the recom­mend­a­tion for rsync X on the Mac. Rsync has been a unix stand­ard for a long time and it is also use­ful for keep­ing two backup hard drives in sync, one on-site and one off-site. You can rsync your iMac to the shared net­work drive as a reg­u­lar backup, and then rsync the shared net­work drive (which con­tains the iMac’s files and your win­dows backupfile.bkf files) with your off-site backup drive, once every 2 weeks or so. 

    I can say this from exper­i­ence, it is always cheaper to pay for and setup reli­able backups than not to.

  5. Nathan Pitman said on: January 3rd, 2006 at 3:30 pm

    Funny, I just got one of these little devices myself as a backup solu­tion. I’m plan­ning on doing a weekly backup to it and as sug­ges­ted might start back­ing up closed jobs to DVD also and mov­ing them off site.

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