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Posted

Hi,

What program do you recommend I use for backing up 'my documents' onto an

external drive?

Thanks

Lenny

Have you looked at Backup and Restore in your Control Panel?

 

Gary G. Little

 

"Lenny" <lenny@thetakeout.com> wrote in message

news:sOOdnRUAXbCtjhHbnZ2dnUVZ8sqjnZ2d@pipex.net...

> Hi,

> What program do you recommend I use for backing up 'my documents' onto an

> external drive?

> Thanks

> Lenny

>

http://www.karenware.com/powertools/ptreplicator.asp

Excellent FREE program - no ads or spyware

 

"Lenny" <lenny@thetakeout.com> wrote in message

news:sOOdnRUAXbCtjhHbnZ2dnUVZ8sqjnZ2d@pipex.net...

> Hi,

> What program do you recommend I use for backing up 'my documents' onto an

> external drive?

> Thanks

> Lenny

>

As Gary alluded to - the file backup utility included in Backup and Restore

will do tthe job. BTW - it backs up filesand data not programs.

 

"Lenny" <lenny@thetakeout.com> wrote in message

news:sOOdnRUAXbCtjhHbnZ2dnUVZ8sqjnZ2d@pipex.net...

> Hi,

> What program do you recommend I use for backing up 'my documents' onto an

> external drive?

> Thanks

> Lenny

>

On Wed, 4 Jul 2007 22:37:43 +0100, "Lenny" <lenny@thetakeout.com>

wrote:

>Hi,

>What program do you recommend I use for backing up 'my documents' onto an

>external drive?

>Thanks

>Lenny

>

I've used BounceBack from CMS for several years. It is very simple to

setup and use yet it is powerful and fast. The link below is for their

"professional" version, however I got mine as a freebie which is a

somewhat watered down version that was included when I got my external

drives. Seagate use to include it with their popular external drives,

I think they offer their own backup software now.

 

http://www.cmsproducts.com/product_bounceback_professional.htm

 

This is a one for one backup method, not just image files which can be

clumsy and fail from several causes. There is nothing to learn really,

it simply copies your files. All you need to tell is what folders to

"copy" and tell it where to copy and it does the rest. One feature I

like is it's COMPARE function. Just one click and it scans all the

files in the folders you scheduled for backup. It then generates a

detailed list showing what you backed up already but have since

deleted and no long need asking if you wish to purge the backed up

copies, and of course it shows what file haven't been backed up yet.

Select all or any and it does the rest either deleting from backup

files you no longer want or making backups of what you don't have yet.

Restoring is just as simple.

 

Instead of lumping everything into one giant over stuffed folder you

can breakdown your backups into as many folders named whatever you

like, like photo, images, documents, etc.. So you can always choose to

backup everything or just pick if you're rushed.

 

You can run it in the background without a serious hit on system

performance. My version works fine in Vista and it just sticks it's

tongue out at UAC blowing right past any permission nonsense. It also

is very fast. No "calculating time" BS either.

 

Just to give you a rough estimate I do a full backup once a week where

I typically have between one and two thousand files I'm deleting I had

backed up in the past and no longer need and usually between 30-70 GB

worth of stuff being backed up for the first time. The operation takes

about 20-30 minutes or so.

On Wed, 4 Jul 2007 22:37:43 +0100, "Lenny" <lenny@thetakeout.com>

wrote:

> Hi,

> What program do you recommend I use for backing up 'my documents' onto an

> external drive?

 

 

If all you want to do is backup a single folder like that, you don't

need any special program. A technique like simply dragging and

dropping will work fine.

 

--

Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User

Please Reply to the Newsgroup

> If all you want to do is backup a single folder like that, you don't

> need any special program. A technique like simply dragging and

> dropping will work fine.

 

Not really, because the second time you do it, you get prompted for every

single file that already exists at the destination. That's why backup

programs are used - they behave more intelligently in that situation.

 

Steve

Thanks for the replies. Very useful and most appreciated.

Cheers

Lenny

 

"Steve Thackery" <thack@nowhere.net> wrote in message

news:ebJCmqtvHHA.4736@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...

>> If all you want to do is backup a single folder like that, you don't

>> need any special program. A technique like simply dragging and

>> dropping will work fine.

>

> Not really, because the second time you do it, you get prompted for every

> single file that already exists at the destination. That's why backup

> programs are used - they behave more intelligently in that situation.

>

> Steve

>

Thanks Adam. Your time and effort is most appreciated and I will use your

advice.

 

"Adam Albright" <AA@ABC.net> wrote in message

news:0v9o83hdhi5dmot5vlfstv0a9jcksbbdsc@4ax.com...

> On Wed, 4 Jul 2007 22:37:43 +0100, "Lenny" <lenny@thetakeout.com>

> wrote:

>

>>Hi,

>>What program do you recommend I use for backing up 'my documents' onto an

>>external drive?

>>Thanks

>>Lenny

>>

> I've used BounceBack from CMS for several years. It is very simple to

> setup and use yet it is powerful and fast. The link below is for their

> "professional" version, however I got mine as a freebie which is a

> somewhat watered down version that was included when I got my external

> drives. Seagate use to include it with their popular external drives,

> I think they offer their own backup software now.

>

> http://www.cmsproducts.com/product_bounceback_professional.htm

>

> This is a one for one backup method, not just image files which can be

> clumsy and fail from several causes. There is nothing to learn really,

> it simply copies your files. All you need to tell is what folders to

> "copy" and tell it where to copy and it does the rest. One feature I

> like is it's COMPARE function. Just one click and it scans all the

> files in the folders you scheduled for backup. It then generates a

> detailed list showing what you backed up already but have since

> deleted and no long need asking if you wish to purge the backed up

> copies, and of course it shows what file haven't been backed up yet.

> Select all or any and it does the rest either deleting from backup

> files you no longer want or making backups of what you don't have yet.

> Restoring is just as simple.

>

> Instead of lumping everything into one giant over stuffed folder you

> can breakdown your backups into as many folders named whatever you

> like, like photo, images, documents, etc.. So you can always choose to

> backup everything or just pick if you're rushed.

>

> You can run it in the background without a serious hit on system

> performance. My version works fine in Vista and it just sticks it's

> tongue out at UAC blowing right past any permission nonsense. It also

> is very fast. No "calculating time" BS either.

>

> Just to give you a rough estimate I do a full backup once a week where

> I typically have between one and two thousand files I'm deleting I had

> backed up in the past and no longer need and usually between 30-70 GB

> worth of stuff being backed up for the first time. The operation takes

> about 20-30 minutes or so.

>

Steve Thackery wrote:

>> If all you want to do is backup a single folder like that, you don't

>> need any special program. A technique like simply dragging and

>> dropping will work fine.

>

> Not really, because the second time you do it, you get prompted for every

> single file that already exists at the destination. That's why backup

> programs are used - they behave more intelligently in that situation.

 

SyncToy can overcome this problem. I use it to backup/mirror from my

desktop to my notebook but for proper backups I use Acronis TrueImage.

 

--

Annie___ (VM BB L)________________________________

http://find-out-more.brion.me.uk - http://email-me.brion.me.uk

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