User User name Password  
   
Friday 29.11.2024 / 14:20
Search AfterDawn Forums:        In English   Suomeksi   På svenska
afterdawn.com > forums > software, operating systems and more > windows - general discussion > backing up one computer to multiple hard drives?
Show topics
 
Forums
Forums
Backing Up One Computer to Multiple Hard drives?
  Jump to:
 
Posted Message
RedTech
Junior Member
_
26. April 2011 @ 15:53 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
If you have more data on a hard drive in your computer than what would would fit on one of your external hard drives can you use two or more external hard drives to back up the data on the hard drive inside your computer? In other words can you backup a computer to multiple external hard drives if their is not enough space to do it on one external hard drive? I have two external 1 terra byte drives and am running windows 7 home premium 64 bit.
Advertisement
_
__
fanwars
Member
_
27. April 2011 @ 02:00 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Yes, there are backup programs which are able to split system images. I think every proper software could do it somehow (e.g. multiple DVDs).
scorpNZ
AfterDawn Addict

4 product reviews
_
27. April 2011 @ 03:17 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
What is it your wanting to backup exactly,normal stuff like photo's,movies etc can be dropped n dragged or use a syncing software to sync all drives.

System images like a backup of your OS aren't large when using an imaging software as it will use compression so with say acronis 11 which i use,13gb of data is now 9gb give or take a few mb & that's using default compression,it has two more settings below that again,bear in mind any compression can make data recovery difficult however for an OS it don't matter,i would recommend no compression for any real important stuff like family photo's,better to get larger hdd's pref 2tb or wait till the 3tb drives drop in price


Acronis 11-commercial not free

Norton Ghost 15-commercial not free

Easeus-free
http://www.todo-backup.com/products/home/free-backup-software.htm

minitool-free
http://www.minitool-drivecopy.com/

RedTech
Junior Member
_
27. April 2011 @ 08:30 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Their is not an exact thing I'm trying to back up. What I do is go to the start menu in windows 7, type in backup, and run the backup program that came with the operating system. I'm not sure if the reason its so big is because it might be making a system image with it or what. Any advice on what to do would be appreciated.
scorpNZ
AfterDawn Addict

4 product reviews
_
27. April 2011 @ 12:56 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
If your not selecting the data then it must be creating a complete backup of the whole drive,check if you can select specific folders if there's nothing you'll have to decide whether to use one of the programs i've mentioned,if you want set & forget acronis 11 has continuios backup so any changes made are automatically backed up,tho i'm not sure if it can split it between two hdd's,treesize (free) can be used to determine what folders are what size

Advertisement
_
__
 
_
RedTech
Junior Member
_
27. April 2011 @ 13:04 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Thanks for the help scorpNZ. I'll give it a shot when I get home.

This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 27. April 2011 @ 13:05

afterdawn.com > forums > software, operating systems and more > windows - general discussion > backing up one computer to multiple hard drives?
 

Digital video: AfterDawn.com | AfterDawn Forums
Music: MP3Lizard.com
Gaming: Blasteroids.com | Blasteroids Forums | Compare game prices
Software: Software downloads
Blogs: User profile pages
RSS feeds: AfterDawn.com News | Software updates | AfterDawn Forums
International: AfterDawn in Finnish | AfterDawn in Swedish | AfterDawn in Norwegian | download.fi
Navigate: Search | Site map
About us: About AfterDawn Ltd | Advertise on our sites | Rules, Restrictions, Legal disclaimer & Privacy policy
Contact us: Send feedback | Contact our media sales team
 
  © 1999-2024 by AfterDawn Ltd.

  IDG TechNetwork