Thanks to all for suggestions re. backup options - still not sure which
one I'll use.
FYI: Peter, I'm using SuperDuper already, for local cloning - works like
a charm. Used to use CarbonCopyCloner (free), but SuperDuper is a bit
more polished, and for thirty bucks, what the heck.
Miles
On Tue, May 01, 2007 at 08:15:29PM +0200, Peter Teunissen wrote:
>
> On 1-mei-2007, at 17:09, Miles Fidelman wrote:
>
> >Hi Folks,
> >
> >I have a Mac on my desk at home, and I'm looking for a way to back
> >it up to one of the Linux servers I have sitting in a data center.
> >
> >Any suggestio
On 1-mei-2007, at 17:09, Miles Fidelman wrote:
Hi Folks,
I have a Mac on my desk at home, and I'm looking for a way to back
it up to one of the Linux servers I have sitting in a data center.
Any suggestions as to what software is out there to make this as
simple and automated as possible
-- Forwarded message --
From: Jason Terk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: May 1, 2007 11:57 AM
Subject: Re: looking for mac-to-linux backup recommendations
To: Miles Fidelman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Any suggestions as to what software is out there to make this as simple
and
Hi Folks,
I have a Mac on my desk at home, and I'm looking for a way to back it up
to one of the Linux servers I have sitting in a data center.
Any suggestions as to what software is out there to make this as simple
and automated as possible? (Obviously rsync is an option, but that
doesn't
Alexander Kushnirenko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> After quite a few disks died on me I start to realize that backup
> may be worth the effort :)
I needed an accidential mkfs of the wrong partition before I decided
to buy a streamer. Fortunately, all important data were recoverable
(but it took
Hi,
After quite a few disks died on me I start to realize that backup may be worth
the effort :) There are several backup programs in Debian, so could someone
recommend one for our case:
4 computers serving like X-terminals with no users (yellow pages + /home area
is mounted from another comp
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