Back Up Your Work
Having a backup of your work is the most important thing you can do to protect your data. We provide recommendations for personal computers and ÈËÆÞÓÕ»ó-owned computers below.
Why should I back up?
Data loss happens. Spilled coffee, dropped computers, theft, hard drive crashes, accidental deletion, computer virus. It happens all the time, and it could happen to you. Your only hope of protection is a good backup!
How should I back up?
To keep it simple, there are essentially two options--cloud backup and local backup. Choose one of these methods and you'll be in pretty good shape. Even better, do both!Recommendation for Students and Personal Computers
Cloud Backup (Preferred over a local backup since it's stored offsite)
is a cloud backup solution that offers plans as low as $7/month for unlimited backups of one computer to their data center. They support Mac and Windows machines. The default settings will back up all files for every user, no matter the size, and includes file versioning. For more info, visit their website linked again, .
The good: unlimited offsite backups for a small fee, set it and forget it
The bad: restoring files from the cloud will be a little slower than from a local backup
Local Backup
Spend a little money upfront to buy an external hard drive and then backup your computer using software. , built into Mac OS, automatically backs up your entire computer, and keeps versions of files until it runs out of space on the external drive. It will then remove the oldest backup to make room for the new.
If you have a Windows PC, you can use their , built into Windows, which will create backups of your files on another drive.
The good: restoring files from a local backup will be faster than restoring from the cloud
The bad: since your backup needs to be plugged into your computer, it's often susceptible to the same points of failure, such as theft, loss, drive failure, or fire
If nothing else...
Keep your important files such as your thesis work stored in Google Drive. Keep in mind that when you graduate or leave, you will need to move your files to a personal Gmail account.
Recommendation for ÈËÆÞÓÕ»ó-owned computers
CUS recommends the Enterprise version of Crashplan as an automatic backup system for faculty and staff primary machines. Learn more about ÈËÆÞÓÕ»ó's CrashPlan here!
For users who require additional backups, CUS can provide backup software recommendations and an external hard drive.
If you have questions about backing up your data, contact Computer User Services.