Hi
Thanks for all your answers.
kbackup looks like backintime-kde: A good tool, but not very integrated into
KDE and limited to file backup. I think a good backup system should be also
able to deal with database (for amarok, digikam, etc.), and should provide a
good restore interface.
Kamion
Somebody should continue Kamion, imho that's was the right way to go.
We need generic and specific backup/sync tools everything wrapper up under the
same GUI.
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gt; promising, but abandonned:
> http://backintime.le-web.org/
> http://blog.chatonka.com/2009/12/timevault-progress-update/
>
> Before starting anything, I would like to know if people are working on such
> a backup system for KDE.
Nepomuk has this backup feature I noticed bei
>> Before starting anything, I would like to know if people are working on
>> such
>> a backup system for KDE.
>>
>
> Some time back, I had started programming such a tool well-integrated into
> KDE, called Filestory, which would use the same backend that Deja-Dup uses
gt; promising, but abandonned:
> http://backintime.le-web.org/
> http://blog.chatonka.com/2009/12/timevault-progress-update/
>
> Before starting anything, I would like to know if people are working on
> such
> a backup system for KDE.
>
Some time back, I had started programmi
grated and very
> promising, but abandonned:
> http://backintime.le-web.org/
> http://blog.chatonka.com/2009/12/timevault-progress-update/
>
> Before starting anything, I would like to know if people are working on such
> a backup system for KDE.
>
> The idea is to have an easy w
://blog.chatonka.com/2009/12/timevault-progress-update/
Before starting anything, I would like to know if people are working on such
a backup system for KDE.
The idea is to have an easy way to backup a full KDE session or just folders
mainly on an external hard drive, but why not on network too (to