purpleskiesfly
Mar 19, 08, 9:33 am
I'd been looking for a while for a device I could deploy to my users (small company and 99% of us are remote and all travel, 50% travel extensively). Anyway, found a device that I put through the paces and have had the unfortunate experience of having to use myself. Device is ABSplus for Notebook Backup by CMS Products.
The short skinny - the software creates a bootable image of your hard drive on an external drive. The internal drive needs to be equal to or smaller than the backup drive.
Restore options:
1. Device acts as an external drive allowing you access to files if needed so you can borrow a client/co-worker laptop to get to your power point.
2. Go buy a hard drive (equal in size to the device or equal to what you presently have). Boot to the recovery CD that you have with you ;). Personal experience had me up and running within an hour once I had a replacement hard drive. ^
3. Last option (I travel to Africa regularly and the corner computer store is not that easy to find) get a screwdriver and open the external enclosure and swap the drives. A couple reboots and you're back up and running.
CMS Products did allow me to have a demo unit for up to 90 days while I put the device through the paces. The initial unit I did break when I was pulling the drive out and they did an advance replacement (e.g. I prepaid for another, refunded when they got the broken drive back) which I had in 48 hours.
Losing data on the road is always a fear. Another thought, keep the backup drive separate from your laptop bag in case someone walks off with your laptop.
Unit I have (currently backup up) is 160GB SATA and cost me @ $225.
The short skinny - the software creates a bootable image of your hard drive on an external drive. The internal drive needs to be equal to or smaller than the backup drive.
Restore options:
1. Device acts as an external drive allowing you access to files if needed so you can borrow a client/co-worker laptop to get to your power point.
2. Go buy a hard drive (equal in size to the device or equal to what you presently have). Boot to the recovery CD that you have with you ;). Personal experience had me up and running within an hour once I had a replacement hard drive. ^
3. Last option (I travel to Africa regularly and the corner computer store is not that easy to find) get a screwdriver and open the external enclosure and swap the drives. A couple reboots and you're back up and running.
CMS Products did allow me to have a demo unit for up to 90 days while I put the device through the paces. The initial unit I did break when I was pulling the drive out and they did an advance replacement (e.g. I prepaid for another, refunded when they got the broken drive back) which I had in 48 hours.
Losing data on the road is always a fear. Another thought, keep the backup drive separate from your laptop bag in case someone walks off with your laptop.
Unit I have (currently backup up) is 160GB SATA and cost me @ $225.