Approve the Cookies
This website uses cookies to improve your user experience. By using this site, you agree to our use of cookies and our Privacy Policy.
OK
Forums  •   • New posts  •   • RTAT  •   • 'Best of'  •   • Gallery  •   • Gear
Guest
Forums  •   • New posts  •   • RTAT  •   • 'Best of'  •   • Gallery  •   • Gear
Register to forums    Log in

 
FORUMS Cameras, Lenses & Accessories Canon Accessories 
Thread started 20 Feb 2010 (Saturday) 16:43
Search threadPrev/next
sponsored links (only for non-logged)

Importance of a Back-Up

 
BKGInc
Goldmember
Avatar
1,296 posts
Gallery: 8 photos
Likes: 145
Joined Mar 2007
Location: Central Valley, California
     
Feb 20, 2010 16:43 |  #1

About a month ago my backup drive crashed. I was using a Western Digital MyBook 500GB. I have everything stored on it. Using about 350GB, mostly photos. I used to have everything stored on my computer hard drive and then also backed up onto this drive. Well my computer started acting up because I had the hard drive almost full. So I wiped it all out to free up space and make it run smoother. I had everything saved on my WD MyBook so I was good. I know that for back up purposes you should have everything saved in at least two places so the plan was to buy another back up drive and back up my back up. Well…………..I never got to it and the unthinkable happened. I went to access my files on my back up and it had crashed, hard! I went into panic mode. I ended up taking it to Best buy to the Geek Squad and they had it about a week and couldn’t do anything with it. They said it was too far gone and that I should just take a hammer to it and destroy it. No kidding! That’s what they told me! At lease they didn’t charge me anything. I talked to a friend and he had a friend that was a computer tech. I gave my drive to him and he was able to pull ALL of my stuff off of the bad drive and put it onto a new Seagate back up drive. YEAH! So it turns out I didn’t lose anything! BUT it was a very stressful time. It just cost me 3 hrs of his labor and the cost of a new back up drive. Plus, I even bought another back up drive so that I can now back up my back up. This will NOT happen to me again. You really can’t put a price on all of your photos and work from the past few years. So I want to pass on my experience to all of my friends here on POTN to stress the importance of a good back up.


R5 Gripped | RF 24-105 f/4L | RF 70-200 f/2.8L

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
Naturalist
Adrift on a lonely vast sea
5,769 posts
Likes: 1251
Joined May 2007
     
Feb 20, 2010 16:50 |  #2

Your friend should work at BB. You're lucky you got all the images back! Thanks for sharing the warning.



5D Mk IV & 7D Mk II
EF 16-35 f/4L EF 50 f/1.8 (Original) EF 24-105 f/4L EF 100 f/2.8L Macro EF 100-400 f/4.5-5.6L[/FONT]

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
oRGie
Senior Member
398 posts
Joined Nov 2009
Location: Portugal
     
Feb 20, 2010 16:53 |  #3

Good heads up for anyone leaving it till tommorow ;) but now you have 2 back up drives, are you keeping one of them somewhere else ?

I have 2 back up drives, well 3, but 1 has everything on it, 1 has just the photos, the other has everything else. The drive with everything on it and a wallet with all the negs from my film days live somewhere else :)


oRGie - I am an EOS and the 7D was my idea :cool:
http://www.fluidr.com/​photos/orgie (external link)
EF70-200F4LIS - EF-S15-85IS - EF50 1.8II

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
zelseman
Goldmember
Avatar
1,922 posts
Likes: 34
Joined Mar 2008
Location: Tahlequah, OK
     
Feb 20, 2010 16:58 |  #4

You sir are lucky. I need to buy another backup. Thanks for the reminder.


Gear List
Website (external link)/Blog (external link)

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
BKGInc
THREAD ­ STARTER
Goldmember
Avatar
1,296 posts
Gallery: 8 photos
Likes: 145
Joined Mar 2007
Location: Central Valley, California
     
Feb 20, 2010 16:59 as a reply to  @ oRGie's post |  #5

Right now I just have both drives exact the same. (mirrored) In time I will probably change the organization and then keep one in my fire proof safe.


R5 Gripped | RF 24-105 f/4L | RF 70-200 f/2.8L

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
RPCrowe
Cream of the Crop
Avatar
8,331 posts
Gallery: 2 photos
Likes: 2522
Joined Nov 2005
Location: San Diego County, California, USA
     
Feb 20, 2010 17:08 as a reply to  @ oRGie's post |  #6

When I travel, I copy my images from my CF cards to a pair of small physical size 500GB Western Digital "My Passport" external hard drives. I don't usually do any post processing on these images except to batch rename them and to view samples to discover and interdict any photographer or equipment problems. I will carry one hard drive in my carry-on bag and my wife will carry the other in her carry-on.

At home, I have an additional pair of desk top external hard drives, an Iomega and a Free Agent. I keep one of these hard drives on my desk attached to my computer and another hard drive in a fire resistant file cabinet in my steel RV garage which is on my property but, not attached to my house. I back up the contents of the desk hard drive to the garage hard drive at regular intervals.

I only keep selected images on which I have completed post processing on my computer hard drive.


See my images at http://rpcrowe.smugmug​.com/ (external link)

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
Hogloff
Cream of the Crop
7,606 posts
Likes: 416
Joined Apr 2003
Location: British Columbia
     
Feb 20, 2010 17:29 |  #7
bannedPermanent ban

BKGInc wrote in post #9647798 (external link)
Right now I just have both drives exact the same. (mirrored) In time I will probably change the organization and then keep one in my fire proof safe.

If they are mirrored like in a Raid setup, then they are not safe. You can still accidentally erase files, and the raid will automatically erase the same file from the mirrored drive.

I use a Drobo unit for my main drive setup and have a separate set of external drives that I backup to whenever I put new files onto the Drobo unit. The external drives stay in my office at work...far away from my main drive.




  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
BKGInc
THREAD ­ STARTER
Goldmember
Avatar
1,296 posts
Gallery: 8 photos
Likes: 145
Joined Mar 2007
Location: Central Valley, California
     
Feb 21, 2010 09:27 |  #8

Hogloff wrote in post #9647976 (external link)
If they are mirrored like in a Raid setup, then they are not safe. You can still accidentally erase files, and the raid will automatically erase the same file from the mirrored drive.

I use a Drobo unit for my main drive setup and have a separate set of external drives that I backup to whenever I put new files onto the Drobo unit. The external drives stay in my office at work...far away from my main drive.

Oh ok, well then maybe I don't have a "raid" setup because right now I have to manually copy my files and folders to each drive. The drives came with back up software but I'm currently not using it. I am using the drives like flash drive in that I have to manually put my files and folders on to each drived separately. It's time consuming but I just don't want to go through losing everything again.


R5 Gripped | RF 24-105 f/4L | RF 70-200 f/2.8L

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
nordlysBW
Senior Member
Avatar
378 posts
Gallery: 3 photos
Likes: 46
Joined Jan 2010
     
Feb 22, 2010 12:30 as a reply to  @ BKGInc's post |  #9

Try and use Free File Sync for example:

http://sourceforge.net​/projects/freefilesync​/ (external link)

to cut down on the manual copying tedium. That won't exclude human error, but speeds up synchronizing your backups.




  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
sponsored links (only for non-logged)

1,663 views & 0 likes for this thread, 7 members have posted to it.
Importance of a Back-Up
FORUMS Cameras, Lenses & Accessories Canon Accessories 
AAA
x 1600
y 1600

Jump to forum...   •  Rules   •  Forums   •  New posts   •  RTAT   •  'Best of'   •  Gallery   •  Gear   •  Reviews   •  Member list   •  Polls   •  Image rules   •  Search   •  Password reset   •  Home

Not a member yet?
Register to forums
Registered members may log in to forums and access all the features: full search, image upload, follow forums, own gear list and ratings, likes, more forums, private messaging, thread follow, notifications, own gallery, all settings, view hosted photos, own reviews, see more and do more... and all is free. Don't be a stranger - register now and start posting!


COOKIES DISCLAIMER: This website uses cookies to improve your user experience. By using this site, you agree to our use of cookies and to our privacy policy.
Privacy policy and cookie usage info.


POWERED BY AMASS forum software 2.58forum software
version 2.58 /
code and design
by Pekka Saarinen ©
for photography-on-the.net

Latest registered member is semonsters
1706 guests, 140 members online
Simultaneous users record so far is 15,144, that happened on Nov 22, 2018

Photography-on-the.net Digital Photography Forums is the website for photographers and all who love great photos, camera and post processing techniques, gear talk, discussion and sharing. Professionals, hobbyists, newbies and those who don't even own a camera -- all are welcome regardless of skill, favourite brand, gear, gender or age. Registering and usage is free.