show/hide this revision's text 5 typo correction: person => personal

These are interesting times for "the person personal backup question".

There are several schools of thought now:

  1. Frequent Automated Local Backup + Periodic Local Manual Backup

    Automated: Scheduled Nightly backup to external drive.
    Manual: Copy to second external drive once per week / month / year / oops-forgot
    and drop it of at "Mom's house".
     
    Lot's of software in the field, but here's a few: There's RSync and TimeMachine on Mac, and DeltaCopy www.aboutmyip.com/AboutMyXApp/DeltaCopy.jsp for Windows.

  2. Frequent Remote Backup

    There are a pile of services that enable you to backup across you internet connection to a remote data centre. Amazon's S3 service + JungleDisk's client software is a strong choice these days - not the cheapest option, but you pay for what you use and Amazon's track record suggests as a company it will be in business as long or longer than any other storage providers who hang their shingle today.
     
    Did I mention it should be encrypted? Props to JungleDisk for handling the "encryption issue" and future-proofing (open source library to interoperate with Jungle Disk) pretty well.

  3. All of the above.

    Some people call it being paranoid ... others think to themselves "Ahhh, I can sleep at night now".


Also, it's more fault-tolerance than backup, but you should check out Drobo - basically it's dead simple RAID that seems to work quite well.

show/hide this revision's text 4 added 214 characters in body

These are interesting times for "the person backup question".

There are several schools of thought now:

  1. Frequent Automated Local Backup + Periodic Local Manual Backup

    Automated: Scheduled Nightly backup to external drive.
    Manual: Copy to second external drive once per week / month / year / oops-forgot
    and drop it of at "Mom's house".
     
    Lot's of software in the field, but here's a few: There's RSync and TimeMachine on Mac, and DeltaCopy www.aboutmyip.com/AboutMyXApp/DeltaCopy.jsp for Windows.

  2. Frequent Remote Backup

    There are a pile of services that enable you to backup across you internet connection to a remote data centre. Amazon's S3 service + JungleDisk's client software is a strong choice these days - not the cheapest option, but you pay for what you use and Amazon's track record suggests as a company it will be in business as long or longer than any other storage providers who hang their shingle today.
     
    Did I mention it should be encrypted? Props to JungleDisk for handling the "encryption issue" and future-proofing (open source library to interoperate with Jungle Disk) pretty well.

  3. All of the above.

    Some people call it being paranoid ... others think to themselves "Ahhh, I can sleep at night now".


Also, it's more fault-tolerance than backup, but you should check out Drobo - basically it's dead simple RAID that seems to work quite well.

show/hide this revision's text 3 added 146 characters in body

These are interesting times for "the person backup question".

There are several schools of thought now:

  1. Frequent Automated Local Backup + Periodic Local Manual Backup

    Automated: Scheduled Nightly backup to external drive.
    Manual: Copy to second external drive once per week / month / year / oops-forgot
    and drop it of at "Mom's house".
     
    Lot's of software in the field, but here's a few: There's RSync and TimeMachine on Mac, and [DeltaCopy] DeltaCopy www.aboutmyip.com/AboutMyXApp/DeltaCopy.jsp for Windows.

  2. Frequent Remote Backup

    There are a pile of services that enable you to backup across you internet connection to a remote data centre. Amazon's S3 service + JungleDisk's client software is a strong choice these days - not the cheapest option, but you pay for what you use and Amazon's track record suggests as a company it will be in business as long or longer than any other storage providers who hang their shingle today.
     
    Did I mention it should be encrypted? Props to JungleDisk for handling the "encryption issue" and future-proofing (open source library to interoperate with Jungle Disk) pretty well.

  3. All of the above.

    Some people call it being paranoid ... others think to themselves "Ahhh, I can sleep at night now".

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