- Backup Software
- Posted by kevin on December 13th, 2005
I purchased a backup software called Dantz Retrospect. I backed up data onto
my internal, which took up twice the original space because it pratically
mirror the data. Where are backups usually stored? I can't seem to get rid
of it. It is taking up lots of space on my internal hard drive. What are my
solutions?
- Posted by Galen on December 13th, 2005
In news:A2208FA0-9332-45D5-BE3A-B6C4D763173A@microsoft.com,
kevin <kevin@discussions.microsoft.com> had this to say:
My reply is at the bottom of your sent message:
> I purchased a backup software called Dantz Retrospect. I backed up
> data onto my internal, which took up twice the original space because
> it pratically mirror the data. Where are backups usually stored? I
> can't seem to get rid of it. It is taking up lots of space on my
> internal hard drive. What are my solutions?
I've never used that software and so, your solutions are to contact them for
more information or to consider an alternate product and try to get your
money back. My limited advice is given here:
Backup! Image/Clone :
http://kgiii.info/windows/all/advanced/image-clone.html
Establishing a backup plan and a life cycle for the data is important for
even home users. Finding what works best for you, however, is a road I can't
lead you on as my choices are very specific to my needs.
--
Galen - MS MVP - Windows (Shell/User & IE)
http://dts-l.org/
"My life is spent in one long effort to escape from the commonplaces of
existence." - Sherlock Holmes
- Posted by Nepatsfan on December 13th, 2005
kevin wrote:
> I purchased a backup software called Dantz Retrospect. I
> backed up data onto my internal, which took up twice the
> original space because it pratically mirror the data. Where
> are backups usually stored? I can't seem to get rid of it.
> It is taking up lots of space on my internal hard drive.
> What are my solutions?
If you have the backup file stored on the same hard drive then
your data isn't really backed up. You need to store the backup
files on either an external hard drive or removable media such
a CD or DVD. Think about it, if your internal hard drive fails,
how do you recover your data? Even a second internal hard drive
isn't a great backup solution.
Consider investing in an external USB hard drive or a DVD
burner if you want to protect your data.
Good luck
Nepatsfan