This sounds like a great product to
have. Not being a computer person I had never even thought of that
type of product. I will check into this product and other similar
products and get one very soon. It would be great help since I have
started using trading software, downloading data, and saving lots of
files.
Not being a computer person and to
make sure I understand this type of product.
I can take a product like this and
save my complete hard drive on say a usb hard drive and it will
automaticly backup the complete hard drive when ever I want it to do
it. Then if I have hard drive problems, I can put the copy that is
on the usb hard drive on my machine hard drive and it will be just like
it was, with all programs and files the same as the last backup?
Is the above correct?
What would I need to do to put the
back up copy on my machine hard drive or a new hard drive? Or is it
done basicly automaticly?
Thanks for the info,
This type of software is something
everyone should have.
-----
Original Message -----
Sent:
Saturday, January 03, 2009 8:27 AM
Subject:
[amibroker] Re: Curing AmiBroker slowdowns with a system restore
Microsoft's System Restore is very unreliable. It's just dumb
luck that it
worked for you. Consider getting a disk imaging application and do the
disk
image backup every day. One of the best programs is Acronis True Image,
I've been using it for years. The way it works, when you get into a
problem, it wipes out (formats) the whole disk (or selected
partitions),
including your operating system, and then restores everything from the
backup image.
http://www.acronis.com/homecomputing/products/trueimage/
"ozzyapeman" <zoopfree@xxxxxxxxcom>
wrote in
news:gjlt6u+ll25@eGroups.com:
> The only thing that ultimately worked was doing a *Windows System
> Restore* to 30 days ago. AB finally worked normally like it used
to.
>
> I guess the veterans on this board might have done the restore
instead
> of all the crap I tried. But, I am almost ashamed to say, I never
even
> knew Windows had a system restore function. Or maybe I knew at one
> time, but forgot it was even there. In any case, that's the way to
> solve any mysterious AB slowdowns.