Zip drives and CDs are fine when your computer fries, but how about protecting yourself and your business from fire, hurricane, tornado, flood, earthquake? I use SafeGuard (I think there are others also) and back up over the internet to a former military underground bunker somewhere in PA. Super safe, super easy, and cheaper than the drives, etc. Just my 2 cents worth. Terry Farrell Tampa, FL ----- Original Message ----- From: Greg Newell <gnewell@EN.COM> To: <pianotech@ptg.org> Sent: Tuesday, January 11, 2000 2:34 AM Subject: Re: Mother & Me > I disagree!!! Don't buy a zip drive, buy a cd burner. Zip drives are > only 100 mg. O.K. 250 for the new ones. Many bios will not boot to a zip > and you must reinstall a lot before you can recover from your backups. > It's much easier IMO to boot to a floppy ( or a cd) and just copy your > stuff right back over from the cd to a hard drive without trying to get > the system to make a drive letter for the zip drive it no longer > recognizes. I have both and I use the zip for day to day backups and the > cd burner for whole system backups. 600 mgs. per cd seems better to me. > Good luck on your recovery. For those of you going on vacation, I > suggest you leave the system on while your gone. In big business they > never shut them off and there the same units we buy and use so ... why > not? > Cheers, > Greg Newell > > robert goodale wrote: > > > Hi all, I'm back from what was supposed to be Christmas > > vacation. With all traveling, last minute shopping, family, > > ect., it was hardly a relaxation time, however. Humbug! Hope > > everyone else had a good holiday. Actually New Years Eve in Las > > Vegas was pretty wild. > > > > I have been off the list a bit longer than I expected. When I > > came home I turned on my computer to check my mail. Suddenly the > > system froze up. Figuring it was just Netscape or one of those > > "things" that happens sometimes I shut down and restarted the > > computer. At the desktop it locked up again. Again I > > rebooted... except it wouldn't. Again and again the system > > refused to start. Fortunately it is a new Gateway 2000 PIII and > > fully under warranty. I took it in to the local shop and was > > informed the next day that the mother board was completely > > cooked!! The hard drive they said was okay. Unfortunately when > > they got it all together again the operating system was not > > accepting the new board so they had to reformat the whole drive. > > Yup... I lost EVERYTHING, much of which was very important. And > > the moral is... Buy a zip drive ASAP!!! AAAUGGGHHH!!!!! > > Anyway, I have a new mother now. Let's pray she is a good one! > > > > Rob Goodale, RPT > > Las Vegas, NV > >
This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC