Posts Tagged ‘Windows 2000’

Windows 2000 Disk Defragmenter Tool Issues

Monday, June 29th, 2009

A hard disk may get highly fragmented as files are regularly deleted and created by users. Thus to overcome the issue, Microsoft Windows includes Disk Defragmenter utility. The tool can place fragmented files on contiguous locations on the storage device.

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Even Window 2000 Requires a Backup Plan

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Kalb is a contributor at Free-backup.info — the home of the popular tool for personal online backup — Back2zip. This article can be found at http://free-backup.info/even-window-2000-requires-a-backup-plan.html

Windows 2000 Requires a Backup Plan

Windows 2000 has become commonplace in today’s business environment and with it a need for related backup. When considering a backup plan a company must take in to consideration the whole organization. Backup cannot center around just one set of critical data it must encompass all of the data. Outlining the flow of data and the creation of that data by function and department will give you a better picture of the inner workings of your business.

In order to restore a business and its data to its original work processes every detail must be duplicated. Many businesses ignore the need to create a disaster recovery plan and in doing so do not ever fully recover from a disastrous event.

Windows 2000 Backup Assessments

Every operating system and application introduced to the Windows 2000 environment must be critically reviewed as part of a good backup plan. For each of these consider the following: What could cause failure in these systems or applications? What scenarios come to mind? Within these systems identify the critical data, where is it located and what is it? What is time frame must the backup follow and how often should the backup be performed for each type of data? Are full backups really necessary every time a backup is performed or would incremental be sufficient? What media should be used to keep the speed of the backup high and the window needed at a minimum? Are there backup processes that can occur off-line or online with a Window 2000 backup? Can the processes be automated and to what extent? How will you test for validity? Where will you store the backup?

This is not a conclusive list but rather a place to begin the questions you will need to answer.

Avoiding Disastrous Windows 2000 Backup

Avoidance should really be its own plan because avoidance in a Window 2000 backup plan can ward off the need to restore more often than not. Anticipating possible scenarios that might affect a system and disrupt its stability and then providing ways to prevent the disruption is the core of an avoidance plan. Laugh if you will but the unplugging of critical systems has more than once caused major catastrophes.

Coming up with simple ways to avoid that possibility is what an avoidance plan is all about. Minor inconveniences to s single n=home user can spell catastrophe to a business. Component failure, software issues or Internet connection problems are good examples. Avoidance planning leads to the need for good maintenance and monitoring processes and redundancy of data and backup for reliable restoration.

Backup Windows 2000 Operates As Well As Your Business Does

A backup plan is only as good as the planning and implementation of it. A Windows 2000 environment requires the care and planning needed for any disaster and recovery plan. All planning must include the availability requirements of the systems, applications and data the network contains. Any way you look at it an organization must be able to recover quickly and easily form any disaster in order to survive and continue.

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Backup to CD

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

Andrew Whitehead is a contributor at Free-backup.info — the home of the popular tool for online backup and recovery — Back2zip. This article can be found at http://free-backup.info/backup-to-cd.html

The Importance of Keeping a Backup

If you have ever wondered about the importance of keeping a backup, imagine how you would feel if a virus destroyed the contents of your hard drive? Or a problem could only be solved by using a system recovery CD, wiping out all your data in the process? Or you run FDISK and accidentally remove a partition on the wrong drive? Or your hard drive dies, taking your data with it? Mistakes will always happen and all disc drives eventually expire. Without a backup it is a disaster, with a backup it is reduced to a very large nuisance.

Files That You Need to Backup

A private user only needs to back up files that they have created or modified themselves. Computers use both program and data files; programs can be reloaded from the original discs, but your data can only be reloaded from backup copies.

Making a backup is simpler if you store all your files in one place. Letting each program use its own default storage file results in you data being scattered all over your hard drive. If you are using Windows 98 or Me put everything into My Documents, in Windows 2000 and XP use Documents and Settings.

What is Needed to Make a Backup

There a choice of methods you can employ to make backup copies of your files. You can simply drag and drop the files you’ve created to a CD, copy them using the XCOPY command, use a third party CD mastering program to copy your files, or you can use Windows or a third party backup programs to create a backup to CD.

If you have software such as DirectCD drag-and-drop is extremely easy and you can use a CD-RW, but it is labor intensive if you have a lot of files, hard to keep organized, and you will need compatable software to read the disc.

Using the XCOPY command allows you to copy files from a specified folder made after a specified date, eg ‘XCOPY “\Documents and Settings”\*.* /s/d:03-15-02 K:\’ copies everything from Documents and Settings created after 03-15-04 to the specified drive.

A CD mastering program, such as Nero, allows you backup your files to a CD-R. While this takes more steps than drag-and-drop, the resulting disc can be read by almost any CD-ROM, CD-R, or CD-RW drive without installing a compatible UDF reader program first.

The disadvantage with these methods is that they are unable to create a backup larger than the media it is stored on. If this is a problem, you will need a true backup program capable of ‘media spanning’.

Backup programs differ from ordinary file saving by compressing files, storing many files in a single file proprietary to the backup program, and using the ‘Archive’ file attribute should you ask for a backup of changed or new files only. They often allow Backups to be stored as files for transfer to CD later, and a disk image to be made for disaster recovery.

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