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If you ask health experts for fitness advice, they will tell you to eat right and exercise. If you ask computer technicians for advice, they will tell you to back up your data often. In spite of the sound advice offered in both cases, reasonable people still fail to act on it. It is hard to imagine that backing up your data could be any easier than it is today. Windows even includes a backup program and a scheduler to automate the process. Zip, Jazz, and CD recorder drives are all convenient and practical devices for storing large amounts of data. If you feel that backing up your data is likely to become your first New Year's resolution to crumble, then ask yourself, "When is my data valuable." If your answer is "every day," then you should back up every day.

Backup Basics

Your hard disk will crash. Count on it. It happens to everyone sooner or later. And when it does you will be happy you have a backup copy of all your data and important files. You have an up-to-date backup, don't you? You don't? No worries. Here are the simple rules of data recovery for people who hate to back up.

I recommend using removable media for your backup. If you can't take it with you, it's not a backup. I know a famous author who lost an entire novel because her backups were stored next to the computer when her house burned to the ground. You can back up to floppy disks if you have no other choice, but floppies aren't reliable for long-term archival storage. And filling dozens of floppies is so time consuming, most people will put off backing up until it's too late.

Many businesses back up to tape drives. Tapes are cheap, and their huge capacities make it easy to back up an entire hard drive. But I don't like tape backups because you're never sure if the data is really there unless you verify it (which is time consuming). Tape is better than nothing, but my preference is for removable storage such as Iomega's Zip 100, Zip 250 or Imation's SuperDisk. These disks hold 100MB, 250M, or 120MB respectively -- plenty of space to back up all your irreplaceable data. And they're fast and reliable. Best of all, your data is stored on the disk normally, so it's easy to verify that the copy actually took. I think every personal computer sold should be equipped with either a Zip or a SuperDisk drive. If your computer isn't, you can buy one for $150 or less. Disks are around $10.

I use a simple shareware program called Second Copy to automatically back up my data every few hours to the Zip disk in my machine. I have three disks I rotate daily, taking the most recent to work with me. This way I always have three copies of my data, one of which is offsite in case of a major disaster. But that's not enough for me. 

I also want to have long-term archival storage of my data. CDRW drives and DVD burners are cheap enough now that everyone should have one.  A CDRW disk holds about 650mb of data, DVD burners hold about 4.7 Gigabytes of data.  The CD's are cheap and easy to transport.  They are not affected by magnetic interference. Besides the fact that it's easy to copy your data to a cd for offsite backup and archival which will last probably forever, the burners can serve as a means of transporting documents and presentations to clients or customers.  Many people burn their music on CD-R disks to listen to their custom music in their automobile as an added advantage.

But now let's answer a key question: What should you back up?

Businesses make backing up simple. They buy big tape drives and back up absolutely everything all the time. When the inevitable hard drive collapse happens, the system administrator can restore the works in a matter of minutes. For businesses, where every minute of downtime means dollars lost, that might make sense. But most individuals aren't willing to pay the money or take the time to back up everything all the time.

For the rest of us, the essential rule of backing up is, "Make a copy of anything you can't otherwise replace." That means you make copies of your personal data. Don't make copies of Windows or your applications (unless you no longer have the master disks). If you lose your hard drive, you'll have to take a few hours to rebuild it from the original program disks. That's not the end of the world. The key is to also have a recent copy of your precious data, so that you can restore that, too.

Some things you'll want to back up every time you make changes. I make a copy of my Quicken data every time I balance the checkbook. Other things can be backed up weekly or monthly. I'd strongly recommend backing up all your data at least weekly and saving a copy of that backup offsite.

You should have one folder where you store all your documents. Mac users will want to create one called Documents and will want to start getting in the habit of storing all their work inside. Windows 2000/XP automatically makes a My Documents folder, and most recent Windows programs will store their data inside that folder. One critical exception is Intuit's Quicken. It stores data in its own program directory, unless you save it elsewhere. So if you're using Quicken, right now, before you forget, open Quicken and save a copy of your data to the My Documents folder. Once you do that, Quicken will continue to keep it there. If you're religious about directing programs to store documents in the My Documents folder, backing up will be much simpler. Nearly everything you want to back up will be inside. But there are a few other things you might want to also back up.

Here's a list of common data files and where to find them:

Saved games: Solitare, Minesweeper, Look for them inside the game program's directory. Look for files with the .sav extension.

Email: Locations vary. Eudora stores its email and address book in .mbx files in the main Eudora folder. Outlook Express lets you specify the location of its mail file, so it could be anywhere. Netscape Messenger defaults to "C:\Program Files\Netscape\Users\your name\Mail." Outlook stores everything in a .pst file in the "C:\Windows\Application Data\Microsoft\Office\Outlook" folder.

Templates and Fax Cover Sheets: You may have put a lot of time into these. It'd be a shame to lose them.

Internet Bookmarks and Favorites: Netscape defaults to "C:\Program Files\Netscape\Users\name\bookmark.htm." Internet Explorer stores them as individual files in the C:\Windows\Favorites directory.

Preference and Settings: They're scattered all over your hard drive, usually in files with the .ini extension. You probably don't need to back up Windows .ini files, but you might want preferences from other programs. And don't forget to jot down your Dial-Up Networking and TCP/IP settings while you're at it.

You may have other important data hidden away on your hard disk. It's not a bad idea to take a walk through your drive to see what else is there. You can simplify matters by doing a search of your disk by file creation dates. Look for new files, since new files were most likely created by you.

The moral of the story is, "All disk drives will fail eventually." And they always seem to do it when you need them the most. Protect yourself by backing up. You'll be glad you took the time to protect your data.

 

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