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Its just a matter of time before
you experience a hard drive
problem. Are you prepared to
loose your data? If your hard
drive crashed right now do you
have an action plan to follow?
Most people only think of
backing up their data after they
experience a problem. Don't set
yourself up for a data loss
disaster.
Your data integrity action plan
should consist of the following:
1) How often you will back up
your data
2) What data you will back up
3) What back up procedure you
will use
How often you back up your data
can only be determined by how
important you feel it is. Answer
this question "If my hard drive
crashed right now, I would be
alright if I had the data from
at least (time) ago".
Of course you would want
everything but if you could have
the data from 1 month, or 6
months ago would that be
sufficient? Whatever time is
sufficient mark it on your
calendar both a hard copy and
set up a meeting on your PC to
remind you.
You change your smoke detector
batteries when you turn your
clock back and when you turn it
ahead right? Well back up your
data then too.
If you don't change your clocks
then pick some holidays or
special dates that happen close
to the timeframe you want to
back up your data so you won't
forget.
What data you back up depends on
how you use your PC. Some of the
key directories, if you are
using Windows, are the My
Documents, Favorites and Desktop
directories.
Remember if you are using
multiple profiles on your PC
then the three directories above
can be different for each
profile and each one would need
to be backed up.
You will also want to include
your email data. Don't forget to
write down the email accounts
you have. You should also write
down any username and passwords
so they are not lost. You should
look at every directory to see
if it has information that you
would need.
Make a list of all the software
programs you are using. If you
have the physical CDs put them
all together in a safe location.
Don't forget the CDs for your
peripherals like your scanner,
digital camera, PDA etc…
Collecting these CDs may remind
you of additional data that you
need to back up.
If you are running software that
you installed from downloaded
files, burn them to a CD-R and
add it to your collection. If
you use a CD-R or DVD-R you can
update it as you download and
install new applications.
What procedure you use to back
up your data can be determined
by the amount of data you want
to back up. Your data might fit
onto a CD or DVD in which case
you just need to burn it and
you're done.
If it spans multiple DVDs then
you might want to consider
getting a second hard drive to
copy your data onto. If you are
not comfortable with adding a
second internal hard drive or
you are using a laptop then you
can purchase an external hard
drive to back up your data.
The information you have on your
hard drive could disappear in a
flash. If you don't want to
spend up to $3,000 to have a
data recovery company retrieve
what information they can from
your hard drive, then take a few
minutes right now and create
your back up action plan.
If you ever have a data
emergency your action plan will
be your insurance policy. If you
adhere to it, your valuable data
will adhere to you! |