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Wie sichert man am besten ein Notebook?

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Hallo zusammen,

eine vielleicht überflüssige Frage, aber ich wollte mal wissen wie ihrSpezialisten damit umgeht.
In meinem Notebook habe ich eine 500 GB SSD, die in 2 Partitionen aufgeteilt ist. C: natürlich für das Windows-System und D: für die Daten.
Ich sichere in regelmäßigen Abständen das System als Fullbackup und die Daten differentiell.

Wie macht ihr das und wie teilt ihr eure Festplatten ein?
Es muss ja nicht unbedingt ideal sein, was ich schon seit Jahren so mache.

Beste Grüße,
wisch

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wische wrote (translated via Google)

Maybe a superfluous question, but I just wanted to know how your specialist deals with it.
In my notebook, I have a 500 GB SSD, which is divided into 2 partitions. C: of course for the Windows system and D: for the data. I periodically back up the system as full backup and the data differentially.

How do you do that and how do you divide your disks?
It does not necessarily have to be ideal, which I've been doing for years.

I do something very similar to your approach with my laptop which has a 1TB SSD - this is divided into partitions with each holding different types of data.  C: is for my Windows OS, D: holds a second copy of Windows OS (dual-boot), E: is my Data drive, G: holds only Music; H: stores local ATI backup images (for recovery when traveling).  

I do regular backups of the OS partitions and separate partitions of the Data, Music partitions with some backups stored on the local H: partition, and others on external drives and on my NAS plus backups to the Acronis Cloud.  This should allow for various different threat scenarios - I can recover from the local partition if needed should a Windows Update go wrong, I can recover the whole drive from an external drive or my NAS in the event of a whole disk failure, and I can recover from the Cloud backup should a greater disaster occur that kills my NAS and other external drives!

The frequency of backups can be determined by how often any of the different partitions has any significant changes made.

I also use Dropbox, OneDrive and Box cloud to store other data and share this with some of my other computers, plus also use the Synology Cloud Station Drive feature of my NAS to sync important data with both the NAS and other computers (such as documents, pictures etc).

Hi Steve,

Thank you for your information.
I had a bigger problem with my son's notebook, which was still running with an MBR structure. The Mbr2gpt tool was unable to validate the disc. That's why I bought the Minitool Partition Wizard and converted the disk to GPT. After that I could not start the system, even with different settings in the BIOS.
Also a restore did not work. With a Linux DVD I could still see the partitions and then with the TI boot medium made a complete backup and also one of the system. Then reinstalled the notebook.
After that I was able to mount the backup and so few could recover the data. Strangely enough, I could not restore the system image.

I have no explanation why the whole thing went wrong.

Best regards,