grahamfitter
Expedition Leader
What will you do if your computer or hard disk drive (HDD) in it fails?
Last December my 2 year old iMac started experiencing the spinning wheel of death. It appeared to be a case of HDD failure but the Apple store diagnosed a case full of dust causing overheating after a thorough internal cleaning they promised me all was well. The total downtime was around two weeks. Two months later its happened again and I think either the HDD or its cooling fan really has died this time, I suspect because of some lingering affects from before. Its OK, I'm prepared for this kind of thing.
My disaster recovery (DR) plan is reasonably simple: Firstly, the builtin Time Machine software automatically backs the internal HDD to an external HDD. Secondly, another bootable external drive has a reasonably recent image of the internal one. Between the two I have several options to get going again. Most usefully, If the HDD fails I can boot the computer off the external bootable HDD, restore user accounts from the Time Machine backup, then do anything that needs to be done before the computer gets admitted to the Apple store to get fixed.
So far this plan has worked for me, although restoring from Time Machine isn't as easy as it should be. The only major limitation is I don't have a second Mac but fortunately I do have an ASUS EEE PC for surfing the expoweb!
I'm interested to see how others plan to recover from Mac, Linux and even PC data loss.
Cheers,
Graham
Last December my 2 year old iMac started experiencing the spinning wheel of death. It appeared to be a case of HDD failure but the Apple store diagnosed a case full of dust causing overheating after a thorough internal cleaning they promised me all was well. The total downtime was around two weeks. Two months later its happened again and I think either the HDD or its cooling fan really has died this time, I suspect because of some lingering affects from before. Its OK, I'm prepared for this kind of thing.
My disaster recovery (DR) plan is reasonably simple: Firstly, the builtin Time Machine software automatically backs the internal HDD to an external HDD. Secondly, another bootable external drive has a reasonably recent image of the internal one. Between the two I have several options to get going again. Most usefully, If the HDD fails I can boot the computer off the external bootable HDD, restore user accounts from the Time Machine backup, then do anything that needs to be done before the computer gets admitted to the Apple store to get fixed.
So far this plan has worked for me, although restoring from Time Machine isn't as easy as it should be. The only major limitation is I don't have a second Mac but fortunately I do have an ASUS EEE PC for surfing the expoweb!
I'm interested to see how others plan to recover from Mac, Linux and even PC data loss.
Cheers,
Graham