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Here at work the policy is to tell users to save everything to the PC server at their location. There are shared and private folders they can choose from. So, by virtue of saving their files to these designated folders they are defining them as "user files". If they have a local copy of a file and their PC crashes then it's too bad for them. Every night a job on the server runs and backs up everything. This segregates the user files from the PC applications. The downside is that if the server crashes then everybody has to revert to last night's backup. At home I set up a folder off of the root on each PC for "files" (kind of like "My Documents"). There's also the matter of our Outlook Express e-mail folders and Internet Explorer Favorites folder. I've got another server PC that copies the files folder, e-mail, and favorites to the server. If any individual PC crashes then they revert to last night's backup. If the server crashes then the individual PC'sare unaffected unless they happen to crash at the same time. I need to add another backup of the server to DVD but that hasn't happened yet. Dave Parnin Nishikawa Standard Company Topeka, IN 46571 daparnin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Jeff Crosby <jlcrosby@dilgard To: PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users foods.com> <pctech@xxxxxxxxxxxx>@SMTP@CTB Sent by: cc: (bcc: David A Parnin/Topeka/NISCO/SPCO) pctech-bounces@mi Subject: [PCTECH] Pc backups ideas drange.com 11/17/2004 02:32 PM Please respond to PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users <pctech@midrange. com> A while back there was a discussion about how and what to back up from PCs that got me to thinking. (Dangerous, I know) The more I think about it, the more the PC backups we do don't make sense. We back up the entire PC to tape via Backup Exec or Tapeware or some equivalent. But if a reload is required what would actually be done, from a clean slate, is to install windows, reinstall software, then bring in the actual "user files" such as those contained within My Documents. So if I was going to back up only "user files" on a PC, how does one go about determining what are "user files"? The Documents and Settings directory with all subdirectories would be an obvious one, but what else? It would really depend on what applications were installed and how those apps behaved. How does one go about ascertaining that, if it's even possible? -- Jeff Crosby Dilgard Frozen Foods, Inc. P.O. Box 13369 Ft. Wayne, IN 46868-3369 260-422-7531 The opinions expressed are my own and not necessarily the opinion of my company. Unless I say so. -- This is the PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users (PcTech) mailing list To post a message email: PcTech@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/pctech or email: PcTech-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/pctech.
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