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Articles and Information - Business
10 Proven Tips for Surviving A Computer Crash
10 PROVEN TIPS TO SURVIVE A COMPUTER CRASH By Eve Abbott, excerpted
from her new book, How to Do Space Age Work with a Stone Age Brain
TM
Do these words strike fear into you? If not, maybe they should!
A computer crash is at best time consuming and expensive, and at
worst a genuine business disaster. Here are things you can do now
to prevent a crash and/or insure a smooth recovery whether you use
your computer at work or for your personal life-or both, like me!
The first rule in minimizing computer disasters is backup. The
second rule in easier data recovery is BackUp. The third rule in
computer organizing is BACKUP. I am astounded at the number of people
(in large and small businesses) who do not back up their work regularly.
Without good backups, you risk losing everything if your hard drive
goes belly-up.
Start by setting all of your programs to save automatically after
2 minutes. This will protect your work against temporary freeze-ups
and unplanned shutdowns.
Second, plug your computer, monitor, and other electronic equipment
into a UPS Battery Backup unit to protect it from power surges and
outages. A unit like this one will give you 5 minutes to save your
work and shut down your computer normally if the power goes out.
Then-BACK UP! (If you're not sure what the best way to back up
is, keep reading.)
I bought a brand new Hewlett Packard Pavilion XP system and began
to back up weekly. Seven months later, I returned from making a
cup of tea to hear my computer going click-click-click loudly. My
hard drive had just crashed for no reason at all. As is often the
case, I lost everything on it.
I felt confident because I had my data backed up by copying my
entire working C-drive onto a CD-but even with backups, and even
if your computer is still under warranty, let's get realistic about
how much time and money a crash can end up costing you.
It took four days for me to get the special shipping box HP sent
me to return the computer. They replaced the hard drive, and it
was returned within 10 business days at no charge for repair and
shipping. This still adds up to three weeks without my computer.
First, I rented a laptop and spent hours installing the programs
I normally use. Laptop rental cost me $250.00 for one month, with
a $500 refundable deposit. I could have rented a desktop system
for a little less per month, but I would have had to wait a week
to get the computer. It was great to have the laptop to use until
my repaired computer arrived. But, I had to go through the same
restoration process again when it was returned with a new hard drive.
More time lost and more frustration, too.
Second, I spent hours importing my data from backup CDs. I still
lost almost a week's worth of data (Quicken entries, Word documents,
calendar and contact information) because that's how long I go between
backups.
Third, I spent hours recreating the custom settings on my software.
Fourth, I had to install some smaller programs that I'd forgotten
I would need. THE DAMAGE: Sometimes data can be recovered from a
dead drive, depending on what has caused the crash. Professional
data recovery services charge from $500 to $1500 to get your data
back, and you have to pay whether or not they recover anything.
You can find more information about data recovery services at http://www.drlabs.com/pricing.html
and http://www.dtidata.com/data_recovery.asp.
I paid $1,000.00 in computer consultant fees to get the laptop
set up, and my computer taken apart and set up again to get it running
A-OK. That's apart from data recovery costs, which my backups saved
me from having to pay.
The grand total: $1,250.00 and 7 days in lost time. Pretty expensive
considering that I had all my current data backed up onto CDs.
BACKUP OPTIONS
There are many ways to back up information. Diskette, CD, Zip drive,
External hard drive and Web (on-line). I will not discuss tape drive
backups simply because tape media is unreliable and awkward compared
to newer technologies. If you have more than one computer, you can
back up from one to another via network drives-but that only protects
you in the event that disaster strikes one machine at a time.
There are four questions you need to ask yourself regarding your
back-ups:
1) How critical is your data? (My business and life are on my hard
drive = critical) 2) Do you add or process high volumes of information?
3) In what time frame do you add enough to make it a real loss?
(day, week, per project) 4) Do you work with very large files of
any type? The more information you process or add to your computer
hard drive, the more often you need to back up. For high volume
or crucial files you need to backup daily.
Diskette: There is the small file backup onto diskette. For example,
you just entered a lot of Quicken data and you don't want to take
a chance on losing it but you don't want to do a full back up, or
you have a single Word file, just pop it on a diskette. Remember
to label any and all backup media with contents and date.
ZIP drives and disks: ZIP drives and disks can work well for back
ups of larger projects. I had a client who was an author and she
kept one ZIP disk for each of her books, which contained every file
related to the book - not just the text. If you are satisfied using
a ZIP drive and disks for your data storage - don't change to another
media. Note: many more people have CDs than zips, so if you need
to share data you may need to switch to CDs.
CD: In the same way you archive paper every year after taxes (along
with a backup of your accounting program and data), consider backing
up entire projects onto CD when you're finished. This keeps the
data available and safe, without cluttering your hard drive. You
can file a project closeout CD with the matching archived paper
files. Or keep a variety of backups in a CD organizer (date labeled)
divided up into Projects, Backups and Programs.
The backup CDs I use are 'data only' to safeguard important information
in case a problem develops in between system backups. If you are
going to archive (e.g., taxes) and may not access the backup for
a long time - go with CDs. CDs are more stable, and you are less
likely to run into trouble with irretrievable data. Always use premium
brand-name CDs (or other media). Discount media is more likely to
fail.
Disk 'Cloning': For $70 or less, you can back up your entire drive
(operating system, programs and data) using "disk cloning"
software (Norton Ghost, Paragon Drive Backup, or PowerQuest Drive
Image. You can store this "image" of your drive on removable
media like CDs and ZIP disks, on tape, or on an external hard drive.
You'll still have to spend a lot of time doing the backups and most
people will end up with a set of at least 10 CDs for each backup,
since the copy of your drive will take up about 50% of the storage
space as your drive itself. (That's not the size of your whole drive,
just the part you have filled up.)
You can get more information about disk cloning software at: http://www.powerquest.com/driveimage/
http://www.symantec.com/sabu/ghost/ghost_personal/ http://www.acronis.com/products/trueimage/
http://www.drive-backup.com/
Web: There are on-line services (e.g., www.connected.com) which
will automatically back up your computer (either totally or just
the changed files). This backup and restore option is limited only
by the speed of your connection to the internet. Some people leave
their computer on all night to do the backups. The reverse process
will be more complicated, because you cannot restore directly from
the web. Many information technology and graphics professionals
use web services because of the massive files they process each
day.
Your backup files are stored on their server. This is good because
it is off-site in case of disaster recovery. Unfortunately, your
data is only as secure as the server it is on. I don't use this
option, because I don't think there is any function on the internet
that is as secure as doing it myself and keeping control over all
the data at all times. If you don't use massive files, you don't
need it.
External Hard Drive (XHD): I chose this option after my crash disaster
because I can recreate my entire system without the wasted time
of restoring my operating system and settings, downloading programs
and data from backups, and resetting application customizations,
etc.
An external hard drive ($200) with 'disk cloning' software lets
you put your entire drive onto your backups. If you don't use the
ghosting software you can only put programs, and data backups onto
the external hard drive, not the operating system itself. The ghosting
software will enable you to make a 'boot disk' just for restoring
from the external hard drive to your main computer.
This option will allow you to completely restore your computer,
if necessary (with no hard drive damage). Or, install a new hard
drive on your computer and then restore immediately.
Just plug the external hard drive into the computer and start the
backup, which verifies the data. Then, you unplug the external hard
drive. This takes about fifteen minutes total for my backups. After
backing up, I store the XHD in the trunk of my car (in a laptop
case for protection). Even if the house burns down I still have
my entire computer capability just outside in my car.
First, put an XHD ghost of just your operating system and programs
with all the custom settings. Second, do a ghost of your entire
system (operating system, programs and data). Third, do regular
working drive data backups. Make sure any programs you ever use
are in the second XHD backup, and/or in your working hard drive
for your 'regular maintenance' backups.
I can get a new computer, copy everything I need and get to work.
One possible downside to this; if you have to 'recover' on a new
computer with a new system (different configuration and drivers),
you will have trouble using the restored system until you reload
the correct drivers and eliminate the 'old' ones.
Backup, BackUp, BACKUP! So, how can you combine these different
backup choices to work in your particular situation? Take the simplest
method that will safeguard your information. If all you need is
a diskette file box for backups - great!
I use the XHD once a week for a programs and data backup. In between
I use diskettes or CDs, depending on the size of the files and how
long I want to maintain them. There is enough room on my XHD to
put 4 total system-program-data backups of my entire XP system into
it. Once, you've done an operating system backup, unless you change
your configurations or programs, you don't need to do it again.
For regular maintenance, do your working 'data' drive.
If you do nothing, you are guaranteed to have a disaster sooner
or later. Choose what works best for you and set a reminder to BACKUP
as often as you need to stay sane when it does happen.
For more time saving tips go to http://www.organize.com Copyright
2005 Eve Abbott. All rights reserved.
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