thecomputerguy
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I bought a NAS external backup for a client of mine and when I went to set it up I was happily confronted with a lovely M$ issue. Apparently ... the home premium version of 7 doesn't include the ability to back to a network or mapped network drive location.
OK let's try something else.
So I attempted to setup cobian for the client on 4 windows 7 computers 3 of which are laptops and only one of them is the pro version. I decided to use cobian on all of them to maintain consistency.
The problem with cobian: Because these are laptops I can't set them on a schedule because who know's when they will be online. When you setup a manual cobian backup it does not follow the rules you predefine. I told it I only wanted 1 backup set kept and I wanted that set overwritten. However, every time I did a manual backup it created a new set which obviously over time will fill up the network external, not to mention create confusion when attempting to restore.
Also, setting up a backup to overwrite itself will end up taking quite some time considering one of the laptops will be backing up 12+ gb of data... every time.
Cobian is nice... but not quite user friendly when it comes to having the user have to pop the program open and manually run it, especially since cobian isn't exactly the prettiest of programs.
It's times like this when apple's time machine truly shines. I also had to backup his mac and I literally opened up time machine and it was like, "hey we found this external on the network! you wanna use this for backup?" I click yes and off we go it backs up only modified files every 30 minutes with literally no setup time.
Any advice on where to go from here?
OK let's try something else.
So I attempted to setup cobian for the client on 4 windows 7 computers 3 of which are laptops and only one of them is the pro version. I decided to use cobian on all of them to maintain consistency.
The problem with cobian: Because these are laptops I can't set them on a schedule because who know's when they will be online. When you setup a manual cobian backup it does not follow the rules you predefine. I told it I only wanted 1 backup set kept and I wanted that set overwritten. However, every time I did a manual backup it created a new set which obviously over time will fill up the network external, not to mention create confusion when attempting to restore.
Also, setting up a backup to overwrite itself will end up taking quite some time considering one of the laptops will be backing up 12+ gb of data... every time.
Cobian is nice... but not quite user friendly when it comes to having the user have to pop the program open and manually run it, especially since cobian isn't exactly the prettiest of programs.
It's times like this when apple's time machine truly shines. I also had to backup his mac and I literally opened up time machine and it was like, "hey we found this external on the network! you wanna use this for backup?" I click yes and off we go it backs up only modified files every 30 minutes with literally no setup time.
Any advice on where to go from here?