How good is the 2016 Product?
I am an IT professional and PC consultant. I’ve been putting Acronis TI on my customer’s computers for years. It seems like every year a new version is put out with no guarantee that it’s overall better than the last. This has led to some enormously time consuming problems. The most recent was with the 2014 version where the computer looped at shutdown saying to wait until the program finished, but it never finished. I think that version may have slowed up my client’s computers considerably. My customers must have backups but it's embarassing and costly to me when I put a product on their computers with results like that.
Nonetheless I feel the product has gotten generally better through the years. Also there’s that old saying, The evil one knows is preferable to the evil one doesn’t.
I would like to ask your opinions, especially computer professionals, about whether I should upgrade my client's computers to 2016.
Thanks,
Al


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Thank you for that well considered opinion. More important than new features are overall relability. I have it on my machine now and will be upgrading several of my users to see how it does. Since I'm upgrading many customers to SSDs and using older internal hard drives for backup, I'd be curious if anyone has seen glitches in like environments. Are there any problems with USB 3.0 external drives? Are people seeing the increased speed we are supposed to get with USB 3.0. Are there stability issues?
Thanks,
Alan
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I believe that you will be fine - the new SSD's should provide a lot of performance boost for the systems and using the old drives for backup is probably what a lot of people do as well. Unfortunatley, all hard drives eventually will fail at some point so can't say for sure if those old ones will work for everyone. If you've formatted them first and run chkdsk /f /r and or tested them wiht other tools that show they are healthy, hopefully they will continue to be for many more years to come.
We have seen several posts with users who have issues with either an error such as "database can not load" and Acronis in Windows does nothing, or "weird things" with backup sets suddenly not working or not being found. The do point to the Acronis Database in Windows being corrupted, but the cause is usually never identified... although often is the result of systemic issues on the OS itself, and/or bad disks on the OS or the backup disk.
In most cases, if this does occur though, the database can be repaired with these instructions: http://forum.acronis.com/forum/112612#comment-334353. I have had this happen to me on two different occassions, but can't say what caused it either, but the recommended resolution did work. If you are upgrading from previous versions of ATIH, I woudl still recommend a full clean uninstall and reinstall with this task: https://forum.acronis.com/forum/113656#comment-334624
USB 3.0 is working great for my backups. It will depend on the type of drive and/or your USB 3.0 controller performance though (even on my main pc, the embedded back ports are slower than the USB 3.0 header ports on the front - which is usually opposite). If I use an SSD with USB 3.0, high compression and encryption, I can backup 75GB in under 7 minutes with a UASP compliant USB 3.0 to SATA adapter - averaging about 400Mb/s Read and 350 Mb/s Write. Some of my other USB 3.0 adapters seem to top out at about 250Mb/s Read and 200Mb/s Write using the same SSD drive and same USB ports. Spinning drives are comparable to what you'd expect with roughly 150Mb/s Read/Write in Acronis (on my system). Long story short, USB 3.0 performance is pretty good, but you may see fluctuations based upon the type of disk you're writing to, the type of USB adatper used and the USB performance of the controller in your systems. Overall though, USB 3.0 performance should rival eSATA and blow away USB 2.0.
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