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Pastimes : Dream Machine ( Build your own PC )

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To: LTBH who wrote (760)5/25/1998 1:03:00 PM
From: Zeuspaul  Read Replies (2) of 14778
 
System Restoration

When my computer is kapoot beyond my ability to fix it I use the "Quick Restore" disc that came with the machine. I put it in the CDROM drive and turn on the power. It boots, I answer yes to English, type in Microsoft's secret number and an hour later my machine looks the same as the day I bought it.

Then I start loading my software and start configuring things and a month later it resembles the machine I had before an incident.

I want a total system restoration capability once I have the machine the way I like it.

Daily backups would not work for me as the machine sometimes degrades over time. I can handle the critical data backups with selected directory backups. When things are working just right I want to preserve the moment for future restoration.

The RAID solution seems to address a different backup concept. If everything is mirrored on the fly how does one protect against ones own stupidity? If I answer a question incorrectly during a software installation or uninstall (uninstalling IE4.0 totally crashed my system, Win95 "blue screen of death") procedure how do I get back where I was before I started?

The first question for a system restoration scheme is the selection of the media. The only option I see is another harddrive. The harddrives always seem to be ahead of the other media types in size. How does one put 4 GB + on CDR? Tape is the only thing that comes close but why use tape when harddrives are a superior media? I can buy a second 6 GB harddrive for less than the cost of a tape drive and its media.

If I have the second harddrive residing in the computer with the complete backup of the C drive at my selected point in time do I have a viable system restoration scheme? Can RAID or anything else accomplish the same thing?

Zeuspaul
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