Best solution for backing up / imaging across network / LAN
I have an external hard drive and want to be able to backup and make images of my computer's hard drive and do the same to computers on my windows home network. I want to do this with having just the backup application installed on one computer. What is the best acronis solution for this?

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Hello Thong,
I understand your question and will do my best to give you clear explanation.
If I understand you correctly you would like to backup and restore computers across the network? Well it depends on the operating systems you have on source and destination computers. For non-server versions of Windows on all machines I may suggest you Acronis Backup & Recovery 10 Advanced Workstation. Acronis Backup & Recovery 10 Advanced Workstation can be installed on the following operating systems:
- Windows 2000 SP (Service Pack) 4+
- Windows XP SP2+ x32 and x64 Editions
- Windows Vista all SP x32 and x64 Editions
- Windows 7 x32 and x64 Editions
Using Management Console you will be able to access remote computers for backup (disk imaging) or restore purposes. Look through user guide for more details about the product components.
For server versions of Windows I may suggest you Acronis Backup & Recovery 10 Advanced Server. Supported operating systems are the following:
- Windows 2000 Server SP 4+
- Windows 2003 Server SP 2+ x32 and x64 Editions
- Windows 2008 Server SP2 x32 and x64 Editions
- Linux with kernel 2.4.18 or later (including 2.6.x kernels) and glibc 2.3.2
- Examples of distributions include:
Red Hat Enterprise 5 & 4
CentOS 5 & 4
Fedora 10 & 9
Ubuntu 8.10 & 9.04
Debian 4
SLES 10
OpenSUSE 11
Asianux 3.0
Oracledba the driver you are talking about is SnapAPI driver. Here is a description of the unique Acronis Snapshot technology:
Once Acronis True Image initializes the backup process of a volume (which logically corresponds to a single partition, if there are no Dynamic Disks), Acronis Snapshot Manager flushes the file system mounted to that volume temporarily freezing all the operations on the system volume. Immediately thereafter, the Snapshot Manager driver creates a point-in-time view of the system volume and a bitmap describing the used sectors on this volume. Once the bitmap is created, the filter driver unfreezes the I/O operations on the system volume. It generally takes only several seconds to create a point-in-time view of the volume. After that, the operating system continues working as the imaging process is under way.
Acronis True Image reads the sectors on the system volume according to the created bitmap. Once a sector is read, the appropriate bit in the bitmap is reset. In its turn, the Acronis driver continues working to hold the point-in-time view of the system volume. Whenever the driver sees a writing operation directed at the system volume, it checks whether these sectors are already backed-up, if they are not, the driver saves the data to the sectors that will be overwritten to a special buffer created by the software, then it allows the sectors to be overwritten. Acronis True Image backs up the sectors from the special buffer, so that all the sectors of the point-in-time view of the system volume will be backed up intact. Meanwhile, the operating system continues working and the user will not notice anything unusual in the operating system functionality.
Note that using Acronis bootable disc you can also create disk imaging.
Let me know if you have further questions.
Thank you.
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