Brian Dusablon

More on Backups

A few weeks ago I posted about backing up your data. I still owe you my profiles and suggested backup plans. I also had planned a detailed review of offsite backup options, but Shawn Blanc beat me to it, and his is much more comprehensive and well written. He doesn’t cover all the available services, but hits on three of the best, Backblaze, CrashPlan and Arq.

Off-Site Backups

Over the holiday weekend I plan to start the series of backup profiles. Most of you will fall under the first — the family geek. I’ve got a great way for you to secure your own data, as well as your family members, wherever they may live.

Finally and Forgettably

If this was 15 years in the making, it makes you wonder what they did for the other 14 years and 10 months.

- Duke Nukem Forever Review – guardian.co.uk

Disappointing, to say the least, but not surprising. Duke Nukem is a cult classic for my generation of gamers. I loved that game. I played it endlessly. Years and years of rumors and teasers ruined this new game for me before it even left the factory (which, apparently, it shouldn’t have). Sure, I’ll grab a demo and goof around with it, for old time’s sake, but this game never had a chance. Sadly, it looks like they managed to underwhelm even the most devoted fans after 15 years of development.

“I teach the way I wish I had been taught”

Khan has no training or experience in teaching, and his videos are relatively crude by the standards of online course material produced by traditional educational publishers. They consist almost exclusively of Khan explaining things in conversational English while doing the equivalent of writing on a blackboard, which he does without benefit of a script or even a second take.

“I teach the way I wish I had been taught,” said Khan…

- Steven Pearlstein: Mark them tardy to the revolution – The Washington Post

Unicorns Will Not Come Heal Your Hard Drive

You have a backup plan for your data, right?

If you are nodding your head and thinking, “Of course I do, who doesn’t?”, then you have my respect. I still think you might find this series of posts beneficial as I’ll be introducing some new services and ideas, so stick around.

The rest of you, the ones who think hard drives aren’t made of tiny moving parts just waiting for something to go wrong, you need to wake up. You have data that you will lose.

Hard Drives Fail

Hard drives fail. Frequently. Period.

If you’ve never suffered from data loss, it’s a matter of when, not if.

Notice that I have yet to mention user error, viruses, cat incidents, spills or other destructive methods of data loss. Pick your poison.

Now that I have your attention, relax. I have your antidote. But you need to act swiftly, because you don’t want to be the one who waited a day too long and lost little Sally’s Kindergarten graduation pictures forever.

In the olden days (read: just a few years ago), backing up was a pain in the ass. External hard drives were expensive, massive and loud; and automated backup tools were mediocre unless you knew how to work the command line. This is no longer the case. We have amazing tools at our disposal now that make backing up simple and inexpensive.

Because I understand that everyone is not like me, I will be offering up several recommended backup plans in the coming days. Pick one that fits your needs, or head over to this wonderful form right now and I’ll build you a custom plan.

If you’re in a hurry, here are some online services you can use immediately:

  • Backblaze: super simple online backup
  • CrashPlan: more options, more features, more expensive
  • Dropbox: all your files, on any device. Free service is great. Extra storage is a little pricey.

I plan to post a profile each day, at a minimum, for the next few days, so check back (or use the form to get your custom profile).