Posts Tagged ‘Fire Theft’

Why Should a Small Business Spend Time and Money on Data Backups?

Monday, June 8th, 2009

Andrew Whitehead is a contributor at Free-backup.info — the home of the popular Amazon S3 based online backup solution — Back2zip. This article is also at http://free-backup.info/small-business-spend-time-money-data-backups.html

What is a Data Backup and Why is It Necessary?

Data backup is as important as the data you store on your system; if that holds valuable information critical to the daily operation of your business, then making a backup of it is also critical. Think about the customer information, supplier details, debtors & creditors, etc. stored on your hard drive, and then imagine that one morning you can no longer find them.

Backups are for your peace of mind, and to save you a lot of time and money if anything terminal happens to your data files. Your data is fundamental to the operation of your business, and should be valued as an important asset.

Any backup is basically copying your data files to disk or some other storage device, to provide a working copy of your data ready to be restored if the original copy is lost, damaged, or corrupted. This can can occur in a surprising number of ways – viruses, power failures, power spikes (these may not even be noticed! ), system crashes, external events such as flood, fire, theft, or vandalism , or even a simple user error.

A Sample Data Backup Procedure

How often you make a data backup depends on how frequently the data changes, the value you place on the information, its importance to your business, and the cost of replacing or recreating it. If you consider that your data file is too important to lose, or that it would be costly to replace, then you must backup regularly.

If you open and update your data files every day, you should set aside a labeled disk/tape for each day of the week and make a backup everday. The following week, when you next enter the backup file name, you will be prompted to overwrite or append the previous weeks file. If you overwrite, you will then be in a weekly cycle. If you are confident that you will always have space on the media, you can append and have a two weekly cycle.

If you feel your information doesn’t alter that frequently, you can backup once a week and rotate disks on that basis – Week 1, Week 2, Week 3, Week 4, back to Week 1 again.

The ultimate system is to keep buying new media, backing up daily and working on a very long (6 monthly or more) cycle. This is to ensure that there is always a clean backup if a fault goes unnoticed for any length of time, but it is really overkill for a small business.

Don’t Forget to Check That Your Data Backup Has Worked!

Don’t be misled into thinking that because you have run a backup that it has worked, there are numerous horror stories of PC users suddenly needing to restore and only then finding out that their backup procedure has been routinely failing. You should regularly test the backup media to confirm that the data has been successfully backing up.

Don’t put off learning how to recover files until disaster strikes. Practice to familiarize yourself with the process and make this a regular event, especially after any upgrades or changes.

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Backup for Computers

Wednesday, April 22nd, 2009

Amanda Wood is a contributor at Free-backup.info — the home of the popular Amazon S3 based tool for online remote backup — Back2zip. This article can be found at http://free-backup.info/backup-for-computers.html

Defining Backup

The term backup, in reference to computer jargon, is defined as a second copy of files you may be afraid to lose if your computer were to crash. These type of files may include important personal, work, or financial information. Another way to describe backup is a disk or tape that contains a copy of data. Most people who have backups of programs or files, they store them separately from the original. That way there in a safe place and can’t get confused with other tapes or disk.

Computer techs and anyone that knows anything about computers will tell you that one of the cardinal rules in using computers is to backup your files regularly. Even the most reliable computer is apt to break down eventually, no matter how careful you are. That’s just one example of how your data might get lost. There are a number of computer threats out there that could result in the loss of data. Some for example are flood, fire, theft, accidental deletion, computer viruses, and others.

The loss of important data or files could mean hours of frustration, costly replacement, and even significant revenue loss for big businesses.

How to Backup Computer Files

You can backup your computer files by using operating system commands, or by buying a special-purpose backup utility. Special backup programs compress the data to save space, allowing you to have fewer disks to keep track of. The operating system is the most important program that runs on a computer.

Operating systems help run other programs, and perform basic tasks, such as recognizing input from the keyboard, sending output to the display screen, keeping track of files and directories on the disk, and controlling peripheral devices. Peripheral devices can be either external or internal and are not part of the essential computer. Commands are instructions that you give to your computer to perform specific tasks.

A good place to get started, if you plan on backuping your files yourself, and by using the operating system is www.commands.com. On this website you find links to all kinds of computer websites that will help you with anything and everything from basic commands for your operating system to technical support, registry problems, and even online computer training courses.

Online Backup Assistance

With our vastly expanding internet, you can find plenty of websites focused on computer backup and how its done. There are even websites that will assist you in walking you through the steps to backup your own files. One of these is www.systemrecovery.com. They sell web-based, automated data backup software with scheduled daily backup, data recovery, system repair, and data archiving. Another website focused mainly on businesses in the US is www.amerivault.com.

They specialize in automated online backup and recovery solutions. They can backup local and remote servers and send data offsite instantly. One more popular website is www NovaStor.com. They provide data backup services, including complete PC backup, network backup, online backup, and full disaster recovery.

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