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Question Regarding Backups and Incremental Backups.

Thread needs solution

I just used True Image 15 for the first time (yesterda) and ran a Full Backup of my OS (C) drive. Took a while. It was 81.9 gigs.

Today, I selected Backup again and it did an incremental that was 145 MB.

Now... if I ever need to restore my C drive (OS and programs) I need to make a backup recovery DVD or use a USB memory stick to boot off of and then when I tell Acronis True Image to "restore" it will automatically restore all my increments as well as the master Backup correct?

And... I read in the manual for Advance users it's best to make like 3 or so Master Backups. So with that in mind, can I just copy and paste the Master Backups with my increments folder and paste it into another HD or 2 or do I need to run True Image again and back it up to those other drives?

Thanks!

SEA

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You will choose which backup file you want to restore. If you did your full on Monday, Inc1 on Tuesday and Inc2 on Thursday, and you want to restore the Thursday state, you would choose to restore the Thursday Inc2 archive file, and ATI will need the full, Inc1 and Inc2 to restore that state.

You can definitely copy archive files to another disk for safekeeping.

Remember that any backup file/operation can fail. Nothing is 100%. If you have irreplaceable content in your backup (work of art, business information, unique documents) that you cannot buy back, you need to diversify your backup technology (True Image vs. sync for example), frequency/retention and location (online, onsite/offiste, for example).

Imaging technology is a very reliable technology for do a bare bone system + apps restore, but often OS and apps can be reinstalled. Content is different. Putting irreplaceable content (like family pictures) in a proprietary container is risky. If your Full file fails, your entire backup is lost. Ii prefer keeping backups of files where the files are not put in a container (Windows File History for example, or other sync software). This way, if one part of your backup goes bad, or you don't have the backup software any longer, you can still copy most of the files back.