I take it you’ve got a Windows or Linux machine? Because if you have a Mac, there’s a much easier solution. Edit: I mean easier than a continuous, ongoing chore of deciding what files to save, drag-and-dropping stuff, etc. You do still need to buy a device, though. For a $20 budget I recommend this 32 GB USB flash drive.
I have a Windows machine, but I know there are automatic back-up schedules that can be done. I just don’t want to do it… I don’t want to think about a complex automatic process or make decisions about scheduling. Trying to pinpoint why … it feels messy and discontinuous and inconvenient, to keep saving iterations of all my old junk.
it feels messy and discontinuous and inconvenient, to keep saving iterations of all my old junk.
When dealing with old data, what I find most stressful is deciding which things to keep. So as far as possible I don’t. It’s a wasted effort. I keep everything, or I delete everything. It doesn’t matter that there’s gigabytes of stuff on my machine that I’ll never look at, as long as I never have to see it or think about it. Disc space is measured in terabytes these days.
Typically when I change machines, the data from the old one goes into the /old folder on the new one. You get a nesting hierarchy and down at the bottom there are some files from many years ago that I would need to get a simulator to even read :-/
So that’s what I am going to do. I actually ordered an external hard drive, and every few weeks I’ll back up my hard drive. The whole thing (no decisions).
I also understand that I don’t need to worry about versions—the external hard drive just saves the latest version.
I also talked to a friend today and found out they backed their data regularly. I was surprised; didn’t know regular people did this regularly.
Backups aren’t about saving your old junk. Backup are about saving everything that you have on your hard drive in case it goes to the Great Write-Only Memory In The Sky.
If you’re talking about staggered backups or snapshots, their usefulness lies mostly in being a (very primitive) versioning system, as well as a possible lifeline in case your data gets silently corrupted and you don’t notice fast enough.
Well, the way it works on the Mac — and I’m only describing this because I speculate that similar, if not quite as awesome, solutions exist for Windows — is this:
Scheduling: backups happen every hour if the backup drive is plugged in; or, whenever you plug it in; plus, you can trigger them manually. You pretty much don’t have to think about it; just either keep the thing plugged in (easy with a desktop), or plug it in once in a while.
Multiple iterations of your stuff: there’s a “history” of backups, maintained automatically. You can go back to any backed-up prior version (to a certain point; how long a history you can keep is dictated by available storage space). The interface for restoring things hides the messy complexity of the multiple versions from you, and just lets you go back to the latest version, or any previous available version, sorted by time.
With good backup software, it’s really quite smooth and easy. The process is not complex; decisions to be made are minimal; your backup feels nice and non-messy; restoring is easy as pie.
Unfortunately I can’t recommend good Windows backup software, but maybe someone else can chime in.
I take it you’ve got a Windows or Linux machine? Because if you have a Mac, there’s a much easier solution. Edit: I mean easier than a continuous, ongoing chore of deciding what files to save, drag-and-dropping stuff, etc. You do still need to buy a device, though. For a $20 budget I recommend this 32 GB USB flash drive.
I have a Windows machine, but I know there are automatic back-up schedules that can be done. I just don’t want to do it… I don’t want to think about a complex automatic process or make decisions about scheduling. Trying to pinpoint why … it feels messy and discontinuous and inconvenient, to keep saving iterations of all my old junk.
When dealing with old data, what I find most stressful is deciding which things to keep. So as far as possible I don’t. It’s a wasted effort. I keep everything, or I delete everything. It doesn’t matter that there’s gigabytes of stuff on my machine that I’ll never look at, as long as I never have to see it or think about it. Disc space is measured in terabytes these days.
In case this wasn’t clear, for the benefit of any Mac users reading this:
Time Machine makes all these decisions for you. That’s one of the things that makes it awesome.
This.
Typically when I change machines, the data from the old one goes into the /old folder on the new one. You get a nesting hierarchy and down at the bottom there are some files from many years ago that I would need to get a simulator to even read :-/
So that’s what I am going to do. I actually ordered an external hard drive, and every few weeks I’ll back up my hard drive. The whole thing (no decisions).
I also understand that I don’t need to worry about versions—the external hard drive just saves the latest version.
I also talked to a friend today and found out they backed their data regularly. I was surprised; didn’t know regular people did this regularly.
Backups aren’t about saving your old junk. Backup are about saving everything that you have on your hard drive in case it goes to the Great Write-Only Memory In The Sky.
If you’re talking about staggered backups or snapshots, their usefulness lies mostly in being a (very primitive) versioning system, as well as a possible lifeline in case your data gets silently corrupted and you don’t notice fast enough.
Well, the way it works on the Mac — and I’m only describing this because I speculate that similar, if not quite as awesome, solutions exist for Windows — is this:
Scheduling: backups happen every hour if the backup drive is plugged in; or, whenever you plug it in; plus, you can trigger them manually. You pretty much don’t have to think about it; just either keep the thing plugged in (easy with a desktop), or plug it in once in a while.
Multiple iterations of your stuff: there’s a “history” of backups, maintained automatically. You can go back to any backed-up prior version (to a certain point; how long a history you can keep is dictated by available storage space). The interface for restoring things hides the messy complexity of the multiple versions from you, and just lets you go back to the latest version, or any previous available version, sorted by time.
With good backup software, it’s really quite smooth and easy. The process is not complex; decisions to be made are minimal; your backup feels nice and non-messy; restoring is easy as pie.
Unfortunately I can’t recommend good Windows backup software, but maybe someone else can chime in.