Hey SoSH,
My computer is a MacBook Air. I'm really bad at backing up data on it. Help me suck less.
I had a Samsung rugged SSD drive. It's great (small, fast, durable), except I'd rarely plug it in so the only time important files would get backed up is when I'd remember to plug in the drive. Once I filled the 1 TB capacity, I realized I needed a new drive. I should've got a 2 TB or higher version of the same drive, but I got greedy. I got a 5 TB spinning platter drive from Western Digital. It's fine (a little loud for my liking, but it was fast enough). While unplugging it recently, I dropped the drive. It's now making a clicking sound on startup. I assume the drive is dead and beyond my skills for recovery (although I'm open to ideas). Nothing on the drive is worth the several hundred dollars I'm seeing that professional recovery services cost.
Can you help me make an idiot-proof backup system? It seems like my number one issue is that I don't always want to have or remember to have an external drive plugged into my laptop. So what do I need? A NAS?
Most of my essential files are automatically backed up to cloud storage. The TB of files I just lost were large video files, and backups of vacation photos and the like that I made redundant copies of and offloaded to local (and now dead) storage.
My computer is a MacBook Air. I'm really bad at backing up data on it. Help me suck less.
I had a Samsung rugged SSD drive. It's great (small, fast, durable), except I'd rarely plug it in so the only time important files would get backed up is when I'd remember to plug in the drive. Once I filled the 1 TB capacity, I realized I needed a new drive. I should've got a 2 TB or higher version of the same drive, but I got greedy. I got a 5 TB spinning platter drive from Western Digital. It's fine (a little loud for my liking, but it was fast enough). While unplugging it recently, I dropped the drive. It's now making a clicking sound on startup. I assume the drive is dead and beyond my skills for recovery (although I'm open to ideas). Nothing on the drive is worth the several hundred dollars I'm seeing that professional recovery services cost.
Can you help me make an idiot-proof backup system? It seems like my number one issue is that I don't always want to have or remember to have an external drive plugged into my laptop. So what do I need? A NAS?
Most of my essential files are automatically backed up to cloud storage. The TB of files I just lost were large video files, and backups of vacation photos and the like that I made redundant copies of and offloaded to local (and now dead) storage.