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On 15 Sep 2006 at 11:36, David (David Gibbs <pctech@xxxxxxxxxxxx>) commented about Re: [PCTECH] PC backup best practices:
Gary Kuznitz wrote:It will back up everything faster and take up much less space. Each file is only backed up once. If a file was backed up on a previous backup it doesn't save it a second time. It's extremely fast after the first backup. I have one setup that takes about 10min to backup three PC's across a network excluding cache and temp files.Sounds like a standard incremental backup system.
It's kind of like a smart incremental backup because it knows what to restore in one pass. So you don't even think about restoring the original backup first and then an incremental. And with an incremental they backup what was changed since the last full backup so each incremental would backup the same files. This doesn't need to backup a file if it's on a previous backup.
Does it backup the registry, files in use, etc?
Yes. Everything.
What kind of restore capabilities does it have? Does it have a mechanism to completely restore a system to it's last backed up state
Yes. You can restore everything to a new hard drive or you can restore individual files or folders. What ever you like. You can also restore files from the last month end or the last year end. It's secrete is it keeps snapshots of every backup so it knows which files(versions) were on the drives during any one backup.
(assuming a total system failure).
Yes. Assuming your backup is on a different physical drive. (disk or tape) Gary
david
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