What's your backup strategy?
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What's your backup strategy?
I'm curious... do any of you have a discipline / schedule / philosophy about creating backups of your work?
I have a folder called "Projects." In which, are more folders labeled after years (well, since i started backing up works). And then i just dump the projects into the appropriate folder (obviously, the project will be in it's own, named folder or archived as a .zip file).
All of this is on one external USB backup drive, which is use purely for work back ups.
Otherwise, i have timemachine hooked up to a firewire drive which i run weekly.
All of this is on one external USB backup drive, which is use purely for work back ups.
Otherwise, i have timemachine hooked up to a firewire drive which i run weekly.
--Scott
cribble.net
cribble.net
Rule of thumb is to ALWAYS back up to writable media (non disc drive type media -- all spinning media will eventually fail) like DVD or CD. You can write to USB drives (solid state) but these devices are still not as reliable as writable media and I would not rely upon them for a final backup solution.
The second rule of thumb is the same as the dentist told me when I asked if I needed to floss ALL my teeth. "Only those you don't want to lose". Only backup the data you don't want to lose. If that means you've worked for two hours and don't relish recreating that work, write it to CD or DVD right then and there. If, OTOH, you don't mind losing a week's worth of work, don't backup more than once a week. Only you can decide how valuable your time is.
(My own strategy, now that I'm retired, is to backup my stuff once a day to a multisession DVD. When we were in business we backed up several times to a RAID device, and then tape backup each night. But we could not afford to lose more than a day's worth of work).
The second rule of thumb is the same as the dentist told me when I asked if I needed to floss ALL my teeth. "Only those you don't want to lose". Only backup the data you don't want to lose. If that means you've worked for two hours and don't relish recreating that work, write it to CD or DVD right then and there. If, OTOH, you don't mind losing a week's worth of work, don't backup more than once a week. Only you can decide how valuable your time is.
(My own strategy, now that I'm retired, is to backup my stuff once a day to a multisession DVD. When we were in business we backed up several times to a RAID device, and then tape backup each night. But we could not afford to lose more than a day's worth of work).
I have developed the habit of saving two copies of every scene I create in AS, eg, scene01A and scene01B. This has saved me on numerous occasions from the "Bad Header" read error. Everyday the whole directory is backed up onto external USB drive.
If anyone knows how to save an AS file if it does have a Bad Header error i'd sure like to hear it.
D.K
If anyone knows how to save an AS file if it does have a Bad Header error i'd sure like to hear it.
D.K
Have you tried isobuster recovery software yet?DK wrote: If anyone knows how to save an AS file if it does have a Bad Header error i'd sure like to hear it.
D.K
Bob P