Your best source of information and news about xp, drivers and windows vista on the internet

Vista ARTICLES TOP 50 Spyware Virus Vista SOFT Vista HELP

back up

You are currently browsing the articles from MS Windows Vista Compatible Software matching the category back up.

GFI Backup is an Easy to Use, Free Backup Solution


Copy this whole post to another site
cancel
sending request

select site advertising consumerist deadspin defamer fleshbot gay fleshbot gawker gizmodo idolator io9 jalopnik jezebel kotaku lifehacker valleywag artists gawkershop

Windows only: Backup and Synchronization utility GFI Backup is an easy to use, full-featured package for keeping your collections of files safe and secure.

Using the software is easy, with a wizard-based setup for new backup tasks and lots of options to choose from. GFI Backup can do AES encryption, incremental or differential backups, notifications, or file synchronization—and it can backup your data to local folders, FTP, network, or even removable flash drives, making it worth a look for anybody seeking a free but powerful backup solution.

GFI Backup is a free download for Windows, email registration required to download. For more, check out our five best Windows backup tools, our five best file syncing tools, or just check out previously mentioned DropBox for instant file-syncing anywhere.

GFI Backup

Written by Maaruthi on July 4th, 2009 with no comments.
Read more articles on Files Back Up and GFI Backup and back up and otherSoftware and softwares and Reviews.

Back Me Up, Buttercup


data="http://www.youtube.com/v/bYDf0ulPnKs"
width="350"
height="288">

Add to iTunes | Add to YouTube | Add to Google | RSS Feed

I have reviewed online backup services before, but I never bit the bullet and signed up for any of them. I didn’t want to pay to access my data, and I didn’t like not knowing where exactly the “remote location” was that stored my data. Today I received an email about another service, which gave me a review account.

Crash Plan appears to have taken all the good elements of other online backup services and rolled them into one. For a $20.00, one-time fee, you get the software that will allow you to remotely backup 50 GB of data. Yes… I said 50. There are bigger plans for more money as well as a monthly subscription service.

The cool thing is that this is completely cross platform. You can back up the data from your Windows machine to your Mac. You can back up the Mac data to your Linux box. You can take the… you get the picture. To me, that alone is worth the $20.00. To be able to back up each of my systems onto each other is just amazing — and the way to go. Of course, you also go the route of remote backup, which can give you peace of mind if you have important data that would be devastating to lose in a catastrophic situation such as a fire, flood, tornado, or any act of nature.

Let’s look at a few of the features of Crash Plan:

  • No buttons to push or CDs to burn. Simply install CrashPlan and it quietly runs in the background protecting your files without slowing you down.
  • With CrashPlan and your own destination, there are no fees or extra charges like other off-site backup products and no limits on how much you can back up.
  • Your files are encrypted, off-site and at multiple destinations of your choosing. Only off-site backup protects your files from theft, fire, and other local disasters. CrashPlan insures your privacy by encrypting your files before they are sent, keeping personal files personal.
  • CrashPlan gives you freedom in choosing your backup destinations. Back up your new Mac to your old PC, your laptop to a friend’s desktop, whichever you want. Worried about using too much space on a friend’s computer? No problem! CrashPlan will use an attached USB drive to hold your files.

What other backup programs or services do you know of or use? Are you happy with them? Have you come across any horrible ones? Leave me a comment to this video, or send an email to me at chris@pirillo.com and let me know about your backup experiences.

Want to embed this video on your own site, blog, or forum? Use this code:

Backing up Personal Computers
How Do I Back Up My Gmail?
The Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine
Move From Firefox To Internet Explorer?
Collapsing A Registry Hive

Nice to be back on Lockergnome!
Back to Top
Iraqis want their Net back
Screenweaver is back and Open Source
Unified Back and Forward Button

Written by Chris Pirillo on November 16th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on back up and GnomeREPORT and Backup.