Win tickets to the ATP finals
The simplest way to keep files safe is to upload them over your internet connection to a specialist backup provider. You’ll find a number on the net, most using the same conventional technology to compress important files that have changed on your computer and store them elsewhere.
This works well, but a new kid on the block is much smarter. Data Deposit Box (www.datadepositbox.com) is one of the best products I’ve seen in years, something you have to try to believe. DDB tackles the main problem of conventional backup: what happens if your work gets lost only minutes before it is backed up? With normal technology, you could lose a day’s work or more. With DDB, you don’t, because this remarkable service backs up your work as you create it. Download the free software — you get a 30-day trial before being charged for anything — and you can watch this in action. You write a letter, close the file and, seconds later, DDB’s little robot, which you have to make visible to witness working, dispatches the changes to a safe location on the web. You can restore them from there using any net connection, and keep backups of earlier versions.
Even better, you can run any number of computers off the same DDB account. So, your business desktop, your notebook and the children’s machine can all keep filing to the same location. Go online with WiFi at the airport and the service will back up work you produce there too.
It’s amazing — and so are the prices. You pay only for what you use, at the rate of one US cent per megabyte, with no minimum fee. A modest backup of 200MB will cost a shade over £1 a month, and an entire gigabyte of data will be stored securely for less than £5.50.
DDB is smart in knowing which files to back up, but turn off your music and possibly photo folders, which are often huge, and thus impractical and expensive to back up this way. You can secure those at home using recordable DVDs, but the simpler solution, particularly if you have more than one computer, is an external hard drive that you can share between Windows computers, provided the main host PC is switched on.
Buffalo’s smart LinkStation hard drive offers an intriguing alternative. You can plug it into a USB port and use it directly, but this device also
has its own little computer built in. If you connect it to the back of your network hub — a broadband router, say — it becomes a true shared drive, visible to anyone on the network, wired or unwired, without the need for special software.
You can back up to it, and store music and video to be distributed around the house. The truly nervous could add Acronis’s excellent True Image (www.acronis.com; about £30) and back up an entire computer, software, operating system and all. With TI on board, you could re-create a crashed machine in its entirety.
The LinkStation is a doddle to set up and reasonably quiet in operation, though not silent, so tuck it away in a corner. Price depends on storage size, with a 120GB model coming in at about £180. It should last for donkey’s years, along with anything you store on it — provided, of course, the house doesn’t burn down.
david.hewson@sunday-times.co.uk
Industry sectors news at a glance. Interactive heatmap, video and podcast
Everything the Business Traveller needs to know to make a better trip
Get ready for the winter sports season, with our resort guides and snow reports
We are backing British business, what is the confidence of the nation and what businesses are succeeding?
Growing demand for energy, oil that is harder to reach and the rise of carbon dioxide emissions. We examine the energy challenge
Enjoy further reading from Travel to Fashion, Business to Sport, discover more
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
36-month car lease
on contract hire for
£359.99 plus VAT pm
12 months for the price of 11 and a 5% discount.
Offer ends 31/11/09
The UK's leading alternative to showroom finance.
Finance packages tailored to your needs.
Minimum loan of £15,000
Car Insurance
£12,578 per annum
The Independent Housing Ombudsman
London
Competitive
Barclaycard
Not Specified
The Sheppard Trust
London
£80-95,000
Clay McGuire Executive Selection
Moments from Battersea Park.
For sale with Winkworth.
See your free Experian credit report beforehand
Book now & save over £100pp.
11 cool resorts, lowest prices... Early Booking offers 15 Nov.
20% off selected Azores holidays taken in October with Sunvil Discovery
Get covered on your travels with a superb range of policies at great prices. Visit InsureandGo.com
World Class Golf, Spa and preferential Beach Club. Private estate overlooking West Coast
Villas from £275 per night inclusive of Golf
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times, or place your advertisement.
Times Online Services: Dating | Jobs | Property Search | Used Cars | Holidays | Births, Marriages, Deaths | Subscriptions | E-paper
News International associated websites: Globrix Property Search | Milkround
Copyright 2009 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.