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jwz: Classic backup advice
Merlin Mann | Jan 21 2008
This forum question about a comment I made on the most recent MacBreak Weekly reminds me that I mention jwz’s advice on backup often enough that it’s worth reposting the URL (as well as making sure credit goes where it’s due). On the one hand, his advice could hardly be simpler (that’s one reason I like it), but how many of us have taken the time to put a mature backup regime in place? If you value your data, can’t tolerate downtime, and are casting about for a thorough solution, consider giving this a try.
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Good method -- this replaces SuperDuper until v. 2.5 is releasedSubmitted by bmccaff on January 21, 2008 - 9:02am.
I’ve been bravely using SuperDuper with Leopard, despite it’s incompatibility. I guess duping my main drive very easy to do with rsync. I’ve also found that JungleDisk is a very effective backup method when combined with ChronoSync. It’s a best of both worlds: offsite, encrypted and as-incremental-as-you-want. I’m working on a writeup and will post it soon. I even want to try JungleDisk with rsync, scheduled using launchd, cron’s successor. »
I use SpiderOakSubmitted by dougfort on January 21, 2008 - 11:44am.
(disclosure: I’m a programmer at SpiderOak). But seriously, I want my stuff offsite and accessible from my laptop when I’m on the road. »
ArrogantSubmitted by vocaro on January 21, 2008 - 12:47pm.
I was willing to listen to what jwz had to say until I read this pithy quote: If you’re using Windows, go fuck yourself. And that’s when I stopped reading. Merlin, you shouldn’t praise people who have such an immature attitude. It’s people like jwz who give Mac users a reputation of being arrogant. »
oh, please.Submitted by Merlin Mann on January 21, 2008 - 1:23pm.
jwz is a man of strong opinions and he always has been. Here, he is framing himself as a platform partisan, and if that troubles you, then you need to do what you need to do. But it doesn’t change a scintilla about the awsomeness of the advice. Also, come on: that’s a hilarious throwaway line when you don’t take it out of context. (My Lord, scolding is dull.) »
Time MachineSubmitted by frank@frankschm... on January 21, 2008 - 1:11pm.
I took this advice back before Leopard came out, and if I had to do it now, I’d do things a little differently. First, I’d probably just buy an off-the-shelf external drive rather than trying to match the one in my machine and putting it in an enclosure. (By the way, a lot of cheap external enclosures don’t sleep when idle. I found a MacAlly one that does). Either that, or one of the new Time Capsule doohickeys. Secondly, I’d probably use Amazon S3 to do my off-site backup, and probably do it a little more often than once a month. Sure, in the event of a catastrophic failure, it’s a bit more work to recover, but the data’s there and hard drives don’t go bad often enough (assuming you’re not one of those idiots that stops them from spinning down) to make that a big deal. »
I wish my first sync to s3Submitted by Merlin Mann on January 21, 2008 - 1:30pm.
I wish my first sync to s3 (or Mozy or whatever) was over FireWire 800. The subsequent syncs, I can deal with, but, man, that first one is a killer »
The first sunc to s3Submitted by martind on January 22, 2008 - 8:04am.
That first sync is a killer, but after that if you use the automated backup that is built into JungleDisk, it is more than worth it. I have my home machine, my work machine and my laptop all backing up to S3 now and it is a breeze. If you set the automatic backup to go before you go to bed, you can stop it in the morning, then start it again the next night. That’s how managed my first big upload. »
one more step: try a restoreSubmitted by slothbear on January 21, 2008 - 9:59pm.
I liked the 2 conditions given on MacBreak Weekly for making a backup “real”: automated, and offsite rotation. And… In the 1970s, I worked on mainframe computers, and a wise wise person checked the bug logs for IBM’s DDR backup utility. There were thousands of bug reports against the utility, most of which represented somebody not being able to restore their data. So I’d like to add a 3rd condition: try restoring something. anything. regularly. The practice will be good for you, and if it fails … well, that’s good. that you know. and can fix it. »
Off-site location, a cautionary tale...Submitted by Gigantoid on January 22, 2008 - 5:40am.
I’d like to suggest caution on using your workplace for storage of your off-site backup. If you have ANYTHING you wouldn’t want someone accidentally seeing (monkey porn) keep it under lock and key or encrypted. »
About Merlin MannBio Merlin Mann is an independent writer, speaker, and broadcaster. He’s best known for being the guy who started the website you’re reading right now. He lives in San Francisco, does lots of public speaking, and helps make cool things like You Look Nice Today. Also? He looks like this, answers questions, and has something like a life. Merlin’s favorite thing he’s written recently is a short essay called, “Better.” |
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