Subj : Re: backup for windows pc? To : Nick Andre From : Arelor Date : Thu Sep 21 2023 09:07:34 Re: Re: backup for windows pc? By: Nick Andre to Arelor on Wed Sep 20 2023 10:15 pm > My personal laptop I do everything on is Windows 11 with a mountain of apps > configured to my satisfaction... registry tweaks and having things exactly t > way that I like it. There's just no way I'm ever reinstalling the OS and all > the apps I use. Not practical and some apps cannot be reactivated anymore. > > So in my case image-backups solved all of these problems and can be restored > to different hardware if necessary. If my apartment gets ripped off, burned > down, laptop destroyed, whatever, I'm back in business relatively painless. > My point is: At work I might have multiple spare servers sitting on the warehouse with identical hardware specs than servers running in production, so if a production server gets toasted I can just load a backup image in one of the blanks and keep rocking. How many people keeps identical laptops or desktops so they can take one and pipe a backup image taken from an identical machine into a blank one? Not many. Chances are domestic consumers go to the store and pick whatever they happen to have there for a computer replacement, which will likely have a modern OS which is not really compatible with whatever you have backed up out of the box. I have very complete backups of my domestic machines but I don't expect to perform a full restore but for special cases (such as when only the HDD of a achine dies, and replacing the HDD is enough to go back to functional hardware). Realistically, by the time one of my computers has a crash it might be 10 years old already so it makes sense to upgrade unless the repair is cheap. In that regard Windows sucks harder than a weaning foal because you can do a bit copy from a hard drive and transfer it to a newer machine, and it won't work because "reasons" whereas most modern BSDs or Linuxes won't really notice. -- gopher://gopher.richardfalken.com/1/richardfalken --- SBBSecho 3.20-Linux * Origin: Palantir * palantirbbs.ddns.net * Pensacola, FL * (618:250/24) .