Samuel540
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Most Efficient Way of (Synced) Backing Up?
Hi, I've always been one to struggle with managing all my project data and keeping everything backed up in the most convenient and efficient way. For a while I thought Gobbler was the answer to my problems but that didn't go very well - now, I think I have figured out a decent way of managing my project data and keeping all my files mirrored/synced as I work on them... Dropbox! I now have my 'Cakewalk Projects' folder inside of the Dropbox folder on my computer so, whatever I do in SONAR is synced to my online account in real-time. What about you guys?! How are you guys managing your project data?
Daryl Samuel StarBlu Entertainment SONAR Platinum | NI Komplete 10 Ultimate | RME Babyface Pro | Focusrite ISA One | AKG C414 XLII | NI Maschine MKII | Roland A-800PRO | Roland MC-505 Groovebox | Lexicon MX200 | ASUS Sabertooth Z77 | Intel Core i7-3770 | Corsair 16GB 1600MHz
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Rob[at]Sound-Rehab
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Re: Most Efficient Way of (Synced) Backing Up?
2016/02/01 03:10:22
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I do not use the cloud for backup or transfer (speed, size limitations, paranoia, ...) but I simply use the SyncToy utility to sync between main and backup machine and also external drives. it is free, quick, easy to use, gives a summary what it will delete/overwrite before you commit, etc... pretty nice for such a simple thing, actually
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sharke
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Re: Most Efficient Way of (Synced) Backing Up?
2016/02/01 09:19:42
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☄ Helpfulby bapu 2016/02/01 09:54:53
CrashPlan is my preferred method now, it was recommended to me by Noel Borthwick of Cakewalk. And it works perfectly. The price per year is pretty cheap and you get unlimited backups. No need to store your files in a special folder, just tell CrashPlan which files to back up and it will back them up regularly. The cool part is that you can go back and get a version history if you want to roll a project back - just open CrashPlan and select a date and time for the file and it will download to your desktop. By far and away the best cloud backup I've used, way better than Gobbler.
I think it's important to back up to the cloud as well as external drives. What happens if you have a fire or flood and those drives are destroyed? You always have the cloud version to fall back on. Personally I would be too paranoid NOT backing up to a cloud. Way too risky.
JamesWindows 10, Sonar SPlat (64-bit), Intel i7-4930K, 32GB RAM, RME Babyface, AKAI MPK Mini, Roland A-800 Pro, Focusrite VRM Box, Komplete 10 Ultimate, 2012 American Telecaster!
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bapu
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Re: Most Efficient Way of (Synced) Backing Up?
2016/02/01 09:43:25
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sharke CrashPlan is my preferred method now, it was recommended to me by Noel Borthwick of Cakewalk. And it works perfectly. The price per year is pretty cheap and you get unlimited backups. No need to store your files in a special folder, just tell CrashPlan which files to back up and it will back them up regularly. The cool part is that you can go back and get a version history if you want to roll a project back - just open CrashPlan and select a date and time for the file and it will download to your desktop. By far and away the best cloud backup I've used, way better than Gobbler.
I think it's important to back up to the cloud as well as external drives. What happens if you have a fire or flood and those drives are destroyed? You always have the cloud version to fall back on. Personally I would be too paranoid NOT backing up to a cloud. Way too risky.
+yay for CrashPlan. Been using for over a year now.
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DRanck
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Re: Most Efficient Way of (Synced) Backing Up?
2016/02/01 12:56:12
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I'n currently using OneDrive since I have 1 TB free. The business version which we have with Office 365 has versioning. I've been experimenting with Dropbox and it also has versioning available. It's also a standard for sharing files which is nice. I will check out CrashPlan too. My 2 cents - even if you back up locally, back up to the cloud. It is cheap, secure and in case of a local disaster or hardware failure you are covered. Cloud storage is being used by most companies these days. It's no longer an experiment.
My Sound CloudWebsiteYoutube ChannelThe way that I've always gone about making music, the rule of thumb, has just been to make what I love. Amy Lee Sonar Pro 64 (Newburyport), Akai Pro MPK 88, i7-4770K, ASUS Z87-PRO V, 32GB SDRAM 1866, SAMSUNG 840 EVO 500GB SSD, 2 - WD BLACK 2TB, Samsung USB 3.0 SSD, Win 10 Pro 64, Radeon R9 270 Video 2GB, Dell P2314T 23" Touchscreen, Gateway 23" monitor, Presonus USB Audio Interface, Surface Pro 2 w/ Xotopad as a control surface
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dlesaux
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Re: Most Efficient Way of (Synced) Backing Up?
2016/02/01 21:33:45
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I read somewhere that if your data doesn't exist in three locations, it doesn't exist. I liked that strategy. Because of this I use FreeFileSync and backup my files to an external USB hard drive and to OneDrive. I do this every day.
Peace! Daniel Sonar Platinum - 2017.10 and PreSonus Studio One 3.5.5 Windows 10 64 bit Studiocat Skylake Desktop PC with Intel i7 6700k processor @ 4.20 GHz / 16G RAM Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 Audio Interface and Cakewalk UM-2G Midi Interface Check out my website
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sharke
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Re: Most Efficient Way of (Synced) Backing Up?
2016/02/02 01:29:01
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I have a number of clouds going for various things. There is so much free storage available you might as well take advantage of it. I use OneDrive for all my business related files - some tax info, Quickbooks backups, some website stuff etc. Then I have a Dropbox which I use to send large files to people. I also have a Google Drive which I use to store all of my manual pdf's which I can then access on my phone when I'm out and about (might as well get some manual reading done on the subway). I also use this to transfer photos and videos from my phone to my desktop, saves having to mess about with USB cables or emailing things to myself. And then of course I use CrashPlan to back up all of my music projects. I guess I have other "clouds" going on too - for instance I use Evernote to store all kinds of notes that I've made, which I can access in a web browser or an iPhone app. And a while ago I totally ditched Outlook calendars for Google calendars - I have lots of calendars on the go for my business and it's great to know they're always there in my Google account to access on my phone (and the iPhone app I use is actually more powerful than Outlook for the hardcore calendar editing I have to do on a daily basis). These are indeed amazing times. Can you imagine how pissed Freddie Mercury would have been if there had been a fire in the studio and his Bohemian Rhapsody tape, with all of its countless overdubs, was destroyed?
JamesWindows 10, Sonar SPlat (64-bit), Intel i7-4930K, 32GB RAM, RME Babyface, AKAI MPK Mini, Roland A-800 Pro, Focusrite VRM Box, Komplete 10 Ultimate, 2012 American Telecaster!
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