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Monday, September 28, 2009

Why You Should Back Up Your Hard Drive (and a really simple procedure for home computers)

Hard drives are the part of your computer that stores all the information (including music, documents, spreadsheets, photos, videos and everything else) that you put onto your computer. All the information that makes it your computer. They are also, for a variety of reasons, one of the parts of your computer most prone to failure.

When they fail the results can range from a busted computer which someone needs to carefully pick the data off, through to all of your information being permanently and irretrievably lost. However, usually some, if not all information (photos, music, documents, spreadsheets etc) is lost when a hard drive fails.

Now we can talk about the odds of a computer hard drive failing after so many hours, or this percentage failing etc, but that may not necessarily give you a particularly good sense of what that means. So here's something that might seem a little more concrete. Over your lifetime of owning home computers chances are you will have at least one hard drive failure.

Think about what you keep on your computer. Do you have a copy of it? If not it's about time your got some backups started.

For home these don't need to be complicated. Something as simple as an external hard disk, or even a USB memory stick (although if you have lots of photos you will probably find they are a bit too small, but heh its something) can do the job. For a really simple backup attach your external hard drive and then copy your "My Documents" folder onto it using the procedure below. Hopefully the pictures below will make some sense out of it (Sorry for those that know this bit - not everyone does so you will just have to be patient). The "My Documents" folder will contain most of the stuff you have put onto, or created on, your computer, but there can be exceptions.

So to backup your "My Documents" folder open an explorer window grab my documents with the left mouse button:

Once "My Documents" is highlighted go to "Edit" and choose "Select All":

Once this is done all the files on the right will be highlighted. Now using your left mouse button grab the group of files on the right, and drag it to your removable disk.

Once you let go of the left mouse button the files will start copying to the new location.

If the files dissapear from their original location, or anything else seems to go wrong then you can use the undo command to reverse the last action:

Using an external hard drive for backups is a perfectly good solution (for home), provided you are disciplined about it. That "discipline" bit is often where people get into trouble. if you are worried about forgetting then the good news is that technology can help. There is software available that can make backups even easier to do (automatic in many cases).

If you think you want an automated software solution then let us know. There are some good solutions in the space that will help with making backups routine.

Posted by Help Desk at 9:06 AM
Edited on: Monday, September 28, 2009 10:50 AM
Categories: Home, Tech Tips