Backup questions

I am just starting to use FCPX. I have been playing with it for a year but just moved my raw video files in to libraries.The Libraries are roughly "years", the events are raw videos and the projects are pretty much contained to the events. Right now I have about 12 main libraries 17 total and 8TB of videos. I am sure they are a mess as I just move it from a dos platform and a file based system to FCPX.  I have two raid5 drives and I just copied the libraries over so they are back up. I also have the original footage on book drives off line.
I think I would just like to clone my working drive full of libraries on a schedule, then when I mess something up copy the project back into the master library.
If I read the help  archives, it seems super duper or carbon copy seem to be popular. Will these programs produce a working clone ?  I would think there would be FCPX issues with the libraries named the same, but I could copy and rename the Library.
I have just been using the Mac Platform for a little over a year, my automated back ups with time machine have been a disaster to date. I have my system and user files organized so they can be backed up by time machine and now I need to figure out how to clone/backup my libraries.
I hope I am not too confused LOL
Thanks
Russ

Backup for Final Cut Pro is excellent software available from AppStore. I use it all the time https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/backups-for-final-cut-pro/id586594646?mt=12

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  • ACS 5.3 Database backup questions

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    Hi,
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    As far as the the first question, i am not talking about the purging, i am talking about the scheduled application backups:
    http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/net_mgmt/cisco_secure_access_control_system/5.3/user/guide/admin_operations.html#wp1076238
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  • Please help me with some backup questions....

    After suffering through two hard drive failures (not my main drive, fortunately), and being frustrated with trying to keep everything backed up, I'm taking a fresh approach to everything and I plan to do the following:
    1.  Purchase a new, 2 TB hard drive (enterprise class - Can you guys recommend a reliable one?) and clone my existing main hard drive to it.
    2.  Purchase a second identical drive and install it in bay #2.
    3.  Likely purchase G-Technology's G-Safe with Raid 1 capability.  Likely 3 TB just cause.
    4.  I'll keep my current 1 TB Hitachi Deskstar in the 3rd bay.  It serves only my Sonos music system.  (I wanted a separate drive for that so my regular drives weren't always running.)
    So far so good.  I plan on putting all my files on the one main 2 TB drive.  (Formerly roughly 500 GB of music was on a separate internal drive, the one that's died twice now. Seagate Barracuda FYI.)  I'll then clone the main drive to the identical drive in the 2nd bay and make it bootable as well.  That's backup #1 and I plan on having it also updated regularly.  (Incrementally, not a complete erase and rewrite, but still keeping it bootable.)  I'll then hook up the Raid 1 drive and clone the main hard drive to that as well, also making it bootable.  That will give me backup #2 and #3 (through mirroring).  These drives will be backed up less often and when not being used, will be stored in a fire proof safe in the garage.  So far so good, I think.
    What I'm stuck on is what software to use for doing the cloning and more importantly, the backups.
    For the cloning, I understand I can simply use the Restore function in the Disk Utility.  Is this correct?  Or am I better off using SuperDuper or Carbon Copy Cloner?  If so, which one?  And why?
    For the regular backups, I have been using Retrospect but frankly, I'm less than impressed with their interface and I've never liked the fact that even if the backups aren't compressed, I can't see the files unless I do so through Retrospect.  I can't just go to the backup drive and view the files.  They're all hidden in the one Retrospect icon.  So, I'm considering the following:
    Time Machine:  However, I was less than impressed with it in the past as it seemed to completely fill whatever drive I pointed it to and then it would fail to backup.  I never could figure it out that well. 
    SuperDuper:  I was just checking them out and it seems that it's not only a good cloner, but will also then keep that clone up to date and bootable on a regular basis.  It really sounds like it's what I need.  And the screen shots I saw on their site seem pretty well thought out and explain a lot.
    Carbon Copy Cloner:  I know this app has been around for a long time, though I've never used it.  I'm presuming it's good for cloning a drive onto a larger drive, just as SuperDuper is, but can it do scheduled backups of that clone like SuperDuper can? 
    And in all cases, I want to keep both the second internal drive and the external RAID drives backed up from their original clonings.  Can any of these programs handle ongoing backups to two or more destinations from the same source? 
    And finally, a last question or two:
    To repeat my first question, who makes a really reliable enterprise class drive? 
    And has anyone had any experience with G-Technology's G-Safe with RAID 1? 
    Thanks much for all your help. 
    Oh, here's my system:  Mac Pro tower, 2008 2.8 GHz, 10 GB ram.  Dual Intel processors.  Currently 10.5.8, soon to be 10.6.8. 

    valbelvalbel wrote:
    After suffering through two hard drive failures (not my main drive, fortunately), and being frustrated with trying to keep everything backed up, I'm taking a fresh approach to everything and I plan to do the following:
    1.  Purchase a new, 2 TB hard drive (enterprise class - Can you guys recommend a reliable one?) and clone my existing main hard drive to it.
    2.  Purchase a second identical drive and install it in bay #2.
    3.  Likely purchase G-Technology's G-Safe with Raid 1 capability.  Likely 3 TB just cause.
    4.  I'll keep my current 1 TB Hitachi Deskstar in the 3rd bay.  It serves only my Sonos music system.  (I wanted a separate drive for that so my regular drives weren't always running.)
    Hitachi and Seagate both make enterprise class drives. Just visit their websites to find models.
    So far so good.  I plan on putting all my files on the one main 2 TB drive.  (Formerly roughly 500 GB of music was on a separate internal drive, the one that's died twice now. Seagate Barracuda FYI.)  I'll then clone the main drive to the identical drive in the 2nd bay and make it bootable as well.  That's backup #1 and I plan on having it also updated regularly.  (Incrementally, not a complete erase and rewrite, but still keeping it bootable.)  I'll then hook up the Raid 1 drive and clone the main hard drive to that as well, also making it bootable.  That will give me backup #2 and #3 (through mirroring).  These drives will be backed up less often and when not being used, will be stored in a fire proof safe in the garage.  So far so good, I think.
    I don't know what your desires are for backup redundancy, but I would create a two drive mirrored RAID for your main backup. This could consist of two identical hard drives mounted in your Mac Pro's slots (this is what I do.) Or you could purchase a two-drive external case and use Firewire. (I also do this.) Drive size should be determined by how large a drive(s) you are backing up and if you plan to use Time Machine. TM's backup device must be at least twice the size of the drive(s) it backs up.
    What I'm stuck on is what software to use for doing the cloning and more importantly, the backups.
    For the cloning, I understand I can simply use the Restore function in the Disk Utility.  Is this correct?  Or am I better off using SuperDuper or Carbon Copy Cloner?  If so, which one?  And why?
    For the regular backups, I have been using Retrospect but frankly, I'm less than impressed with their interface and I've never liked the fact that even if the backups aren't compressed, I can't see the files unless I do so through Retrospect.  I can't just go to the backup drive and view the files.  They're all hidden in the one Retrospect icon.  So, I'm considering the following:
    Time Machine:  However, I was less than impressed with it in the past as it seemed to completely fill whatever drive I pointed it to and then it would fail to backup.  I never could figure it out that well. 
    SuperDuper:  I was just checking them out and it seems that it's not only a good cloner, but will also then keep that clone up to date and bootable on a regular basis.  It really sounds like it's what I need.  And the screen shots I saw on their site seem pretty well thought out and explain a lot.
    Carbon Copy Cloner:  I know this app has been around for a long time, though I've never used it.  I'm presuming it's good for cloning a drive onto a larger drive, just as SuperDuper is, but can it do scheduled backups of that clone like SuperDuper can? 
    And in all cases, I want to keep both the second internal drive and the external RAID drives backed up from their original clonings.  Can any of these programs handle ongoing backups to two or more destinations from the same source?
    If you are running Lion then do not use SuperDuper. It has not yet been updated for reliable use with Lion and cannot handle Lion's Recovery HD. Carbon Copy Cloner's recent beta release would be a good choice as would Synk Pro from Decimus, or Tri-Backup.  All of these will clone a drive as well as perform scheduled backups/updates of a clone. But only CCC properly deals with Lion's Recovery HD at this time. All of these make essentially file by file copies from the source to the destination. One can easily restore a file or a few items without needing to use the backup utility since everything on the backup is accessible through the Finder.
    TM is not able to create a bootable clone. It is an archival backup utility intended for home users needing basic, automatic, and simple to use backup software. Restoring software from a TM backup can only be done through the TM application.
    And finally, a last question or two:
    To repeat my first question, who makes a really reliable enterprise class drive? 
    And has anyone had any experience with G-Technology's G-Safe with RAID 1? 
    Thanks much for all your help. 
    Oh, here's my system:  Mac Pro tower, 2008 2.8 GHz, 10 GB ram.  Dual Intel processors.  Currently 10.5.8, soon to be 10.6.8. 

  • Help with simple OS upgrade and backup questions for a dumb old previous PC user...?

    Ok...have mercy on me, please...
    I am not completely dumb, I know typical board etiquette, and I have searched for various answers (and found many)...but I just want to confirm my personal "research" and get all of this clear up before I proceed with this insanity.  I know I could probably search more, but this is taking hours, because of all my various questions, one leads to 10 more...
    I have an iMac with Mac OS X Version 10.5.8 (which, though not mentioned anywhere?...is apparently "Leopard", right?  Told you I was dumb...)
    Processor:  3.06 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
    Memory: 2 GB 800 MHz DDR2 SDRAM
    My main goal:  install an app that was in the Mac App store.
    However, with Leopard, I can't access the Mac App store with Leopard, apparently. 
    I click on the Mac App store, and up pops up a Lion advertisement...telling me I should upgrade.  Ok, fine...probably a good idea, anyway...
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    The web-redirects on the Apple site are amusing...taking me on an endless cycle...purchase Lion in the app store...click..."you need to upgrade to Lion"...OK...click..."you need Lion at the app store"...OK...click..."you need to upgrade to Lion to get to the app store"....etc.
    OK...fine...google searches...ahh, I need to upgrade to Snow Leopard first, apparently!  Yes?
    (Maybe the Apple redirects should detect that I have Leopard, and direct me to a screen that explains that I must upgrade to Snow Leopard...and then Lion!  Do you hear that, Apple?  Thanks.)
    Anyway...so here's my plan:
    1) Upgrade to Snow Leopard
    2) Access the Mac app store
    3) Upgrade to Lion
    Question A:  With my iMac (specs above), is it really advisable for me to do this?  Can my computer really handle Lion?  It seems I barely meet the minimum with my intel core 2 Duo and 2 GB ram...yes?  Is this a dumb idea, even if "OK"?  I know that "minimum requirements" on a PC often meant:  "Well, it will work...but it will be slower than a snail and crash if you run 5 programs at the same time" (which I usually do...)  I don't want to upgrade if the "minimum" is really not enough. 
    Question B:  If the answer to A is "not a good idea", then  do I just need a new computer (i.e. better processor)?  Or do I need more Ram?  And can I add Ram to this computer, and is it relatively easy?  I have added Ram to PCs tons of times, and you always have to determine type of Ram for your board, make sure they "match", or whatever, and then open up the machine and install.  Kind of a pain, but once I have the "right" type of Ram, opening the CPU and installing is within my abilities.  Will it be harder for a Mac?
    = = =
    Next:
    When upgrading an OS on a Windows, you pretty much format the harddrive and start all over.  Back in the day I was a PC user, there wasn't really a "great" way to back up programs and files, so this was a nightmare.  You could NOT just back-up software.  You typically had to re-purchase and install it all from scratch.  Is this the same with Macs?  Furthermore, personal files were scattered all over the hard-drive for the individual software...so trying to back all that up to get it back on the new system = nightmare!  I hate PCs.
    Anyway...so, my iMac has Time Machine.  I am pretty ignorant about this, and based on my previous PC backup program nightmares, I have a distrust for it...and don't really understand how it works.  But in any event, my external drive crashed a few months ago, and I haven't replaced it, yet.  So, I am replacing it soon and will get Time Machine back up and running...setting it up again, etc...leading to question C...
    Question C: When upgrading from Leopard to Snow Leopard to Lion, what is the best way to ensure I keep all my programs and files.  My wife and I both access the computer, so two user accounts.  Does Time Machine really do a good job backing up everything and all things?  Is it just a matter of upgrade to Snow Leopard...then immediately to Lion...and then some sort of "Restore" from Time Machine?  Anything for me to "watch out for"...or to do when I buy a new external hard-drive and setup up Time Machine for the first time on it, in order to make this work well?  Will I have to re-install all the various applications I have installed on this thing?  (like with PCs?)
    Thanks for any sincere help. 

    yachadhoo wrote:
    I have an iMac with Mac OS X Version 10.5.8 (which, though not mentioned anywhere?...is apparently "Leopard", right?  Told you I was dumb...)
    Processor:  3.06 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
    Memory: 2 GB 800 MHz DDR2 SDRAM
    Apple has discontinued support for 10.5, it's a plaque of our platform that Apple only supports the last two operating systems in circulation.
    Where as on Windows you can run the same OS version for 10 years and get updates free (if not stolen), on a Mac we get one year, two tops now and if you don't upgrade and break all your third party software and hardware drivers in the process, then your denied security updates.
    On top of that, the OS X upgrades tend to break your older hardware too, or slow it down so much that it drives you to want to buy newer hardware.
    It's funny Apple places the AppStore on your OS X version along with iTunes and Safari updates, but then doens't supply necessary security updates, your machine may be compromised and here you enter vital credit card info, banking  etc. thinking you have a secure machine.
    My advice, since that's a 10.5 era Mac, is to upgrade to 10.6.3 via this disk, then use Software Update until clear. You'll get security updates and your present installed 10.5 software will work in 10.6 using Rosetta.
    http://store.apple.com/us/product/MC573Z/A
    Rosetta is not avaialble in 10.7 so it could be a lot of your software will no longer function
    http://roaringapps.com/apps:table
    I don't see the sense in you buying all new software for a machine that's at it's end of life stage.
    You can buy software in the AppStore with 10.6.
    Question A:  With my iMac (specs above), is it really advisable for me to do this?  Can my computer really handle Lion?  It seems I barely meet the minimum with my intel core 2 Duo and 2 GB ram...yes?
    You will need to buy 4GB of RAM to run Lion well, the 2GB is just a bare minimum, and your processor is a bit dated.
    Lion 10.7 is certainly slower than Snow Leopard 10.6, in fact so many wanted to go back to Snow Leopard and one of the resons was Lion was slow.
    So I wrote a User Tip, here, but the Tips were implemented only recently.
    How to revert your Mac to Snow Leopard
    Question B:  If the answer to A is "not a good idea", then  do I just need a new computer (i.e. better processor)?  Or do I need more Ram?  And can I add Ram to this computer, and is it relatively easy?  I have added Ram to PCs tons of times, and you always have to determine type of Ram for your board, make sure they "match", or whatever, and then open up the machine and install.  Kind of a pain, but once I have the "right" type of Ram, opening the CPU and installing is within my abilities.  Will it be harder for a Mac?
    RAM is easy, you can buy it at Otherworld Computing or Crucial.com and install it yourself, there is a little door under the monitor.
    Videos online at YouTube.
    When upgrading an OS on a Windows, you pretty much format the harddrive and start all over.  Back in the day I was a PC user, there wasn't really a "great" way to back up programs and files, so this was a nightmare.  You could NOT just back-up software.  You typically had to re-purchase and install it all from scratch.  Is this the same with Macs?  Furthermore, personal files were scattered all over the hard-drive for the individual software...so trying to back all that up to get it back on the new system = nightmare!  I hate PCs.
    Mac'soperaing system is seperate, it can be replaced or upgraded indepentantly of programs or user accounts on the machine.
    There are some programs that install a kernel extension file at boot into OS X, those get knocked out, but those can be replaced with a new install of the software.
    You should always backup your users files as those can't be repalced.
     Most commonly used backup methods explained
    Question C: When upgrading from Leopard to Snow Leopard to Lion, what is the best way to ensure I keep all my programs and files.
    OS X upgrades dont' affect User accounts but they can have a affect on programs installed, which most of your 10.5 programs likely will no longer work in 10.7
    However they will (with a slight update) work in 10.6 just like before.
    You need to backup regardless, I suggest a manual backup of users files to a storage drive, a 10.5 clone on another drive, the your ready to upgrade to 10.6
    10.5 to 10.6 upgrade is rather painless, also 10.6 gives accelerated video drivers, so your machine will appear faster.
    However once you install 10.7, you will slow down.
    Does Time Machine really do a good job backing up everything and all things? 
    No, you shouldn't rely upon TM, have a multiple backup stragedy, TM files are hard to access directly.
    Is it just a matter of upgrade to Snow Leopard...then immediately to Lion...and then some sort of "Restore" from Time Machine?
    No need to restore, OS X upgrades and leaves everything else in place, just some programs (with 10.6) or a lot (with 10.7) when you try to launch them they will fail.
    Also when you connect TM it will do a substancial change to reflect the new boot drive.
    If you were using TM as a "storage drive" thinking you can use the archived versions later, that wil change upon the new OS X  upgrade.
    But in any event, my external drive crashed a few months ago, and I haven't replaced it, yet.  So, I am replacing it soon and will get Time Machine back up and running...setting it up again, etc...leading to question C..
    You need not only TM drive, but a bootable clone and user files on a storage drive.
     Most commonly used backup methods explained
    Will I have to re-install all the various applications I have installed on this thing?  (like with PCs?)
    No, depending upon what OS X version you stop at depends how many programs no longer work.
    You will have to buy a lot of new or upgrade versions with 10.7, not so with 10.6 only updates mostly because of Rosetta on 10.6 and not on 10.7
    My opinion, since that machine is a bit dated, is to upgrade to 10.6, Software update to 10.6.8, and stay there.
    Later on 10.8 is being released after this summer, you may want to consider getting a new machine with 10.8 a few months later to ensure all the bugs are worked out of it.
    Your not a comptuer savvy person, you like most Apple users expect your machine to "just work" I think going to 10.7 will be a bad experience for you.
    10.6.8 will server your needs until 10.8 is released and on new hardware where Apple will hold your hand for free for three months, 3 years with AppleCare.
    Your not a "OS X upgrader type of a person" and Apple needs to get of thier collective assets and pay better attention to it's most common users.

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    Did someone help you today? Press the star on the left to thank them with a Kudo!
    If you find a post helpful and it answers your question, please mark it as an "Accepted Solution"! This will help the rest of the Community with similar issues identify the verified solution and benefit from it.
    Follow @LenovoForums on Twitter!

  • Resolution, audio, alpha channel, and backup questions (newbie)

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    Daniel
    15" 1.67 Powerbook G4 (non-HiRes), Slot loading iMac DV SE   Mac OS X (10.4.7)   1G RAM on PB, 384 MB iMac.

    Try breaking these up into separate questions. Easier to answer and easier to be found by someone searching for answers to the same question.

  • Setting up C340 20" non touch all in one pc/backup questions

    Hello there I have just bought two C340's and I am nervious about setting them up, I have gone through the prompts and it says I am up and running now.  But as it came with windows 8 preinstalled I don't know if I should be backing up Windows 8?  I says stuff in the instructions about if you install you own OS to create a partition otherwise if you install it in c drive it will be wiped as part of the onetouch backup?  But I am not sure if I have read this correctly.  Should I be creating a recovery disk..of the OS or other parts? If so how? I also got a disk which says 'drivers' but it was never asked for in the basic setup prompts, and the pc says it is ready to use, so am I to suppose this is a spare copy? Lastly I have read alot on this forum about the re-sizing/repartitioning the c drive and the effect this has on the onekey back up.  I don't know if this also applies to my C340 but it scares the hell out of me, I daren't touch anything now, and if the same applies to my pc than the other people having c:/d: drive/onekey backup issues should I be saving everything to the d drive as the c drive is nonexistant, fills up fast and stops the onekey dead?  Thanks in advance.

    hi confuseddotcom,
    Welcome to the Lenovo Community.
    Regarding your questions:
    1. For a brand new PC, It's highly recommended to create a recovery disc so that in event of a system crash, you can always restore the computer to factory defaults. Check this guide on how to create a recovery disc on Windows 8. As an alternative, you can use Aomei Partition Assistant Home Edition or EaseUS Disk Copy Home Edition to clone the HDD.
    2. The driver disc contains softwares and drivers for your Lenovo C340. I recommend you keep this disc just in case to save you the hassle of downloading the drivers on the lenovo website.
    3. If you're PC came with a 500GB or 1TB HDD and has partitions, you can save your files on the partition that has more free space. If you resize the partitions by using disk management, the OKR functionality might get corrupted. Make sure to check this guide on how to create a recovery disc on Windows 8.before you resize the partition.
    Hope this helps.
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    If you find a post helpful and it answers your question, please mark it as an "Accepted Solution"! This will help the rest of the Community with similar issues identify the verified solution and benefit from it.
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  • ICloud storage and backup question

    According to the most answers that I have been searched here in iCloud ,I found out that iCloud didn't back up all the photos on my photos stream (which I couldnt restore them later -_-") but pictures will be keep in iCloud photos stream just for only 30days Then will be deleted forever. As I experienced updating iOS recently,my phone was cracked during upgrading and I have to restore everything in my iPhone as a default factory setting. once I backup my photos from iCloud,I got only photos that I clicked back-up manually since 2012 :"( and all my new photos were not appeared forever.  In this case,that iCloud didn't keep those photos,why my iCloud storage is showing full?? Any idea...pls advice..

    Your iCloud backup only includes photos (and videos) in your camera roll.  It doesn't included any photo stream photos.  You are correct that photo stream photos only remain in iCloud for 30 days.  If you have photo stream photos that are not in your camera roll that you want included in your iCloud backup, you have to save them to your camera roll before performing the backup.
    Zushee wrote:
    As I experienced updating iOS recently,my phone was cracked during upgrading and I have to restore everything in my iPhone as a default factory setting. once I backup my photos from iCloud,I got only photos that I clicked back-up manually since 2012 :"( and all my new photos were not appeared forever.  In this case,that iCloud didn't keep those photos,why my iCloud storage is showing full?? Any idea...pls advice..
    Sorry but I don't understand what you're asking here.  If your question is why is your iCloud storage full, you can find out by going to Settings>iCloud>Storage & Backup>Manage Storage to find out what is using your iCloud space.

  • Getting wife a new iphone..backup questions

    Not too good in using itunes.  My wife has an iphone and my limit to itunes is putting some songs on my ipod. 
    I want to surprise my wife with a new iphone this week and before I get her a new one I want to make sure I save all of her content and most importantly phone numbers because I actually want to clear it out before going to the verizon store because I want to transfer her old iphone to my daughters # and have her start using it.
    So I guess my questions are...
    How do I first backup all of my wife's content on her phone (phone numbers and photos) ?
    After I back it up is there an easy one step process to clear the phone out of everything so I can have my daughter start using it?
    Once I bring the new phone home, how do I get the phone #'s onto it that I backed up previously?
    Once I transfer her old phone to my daughter do I need to rename the phone or anything since they both use the same computer but have different itunes accounts?

    To get the phone number displayed in the notification ar you could try the following
    Settings - Phone - My Number

  • Offline Backup Question

    Hello Everyone,
    I''m looking for some confirmation on what would happen in a certain situation regarding running an Offline (consistent) backup which is this:-
    I'm running Oracle 10G on Windows 2003. The database holds 2 schemas used by a 3rd party application which runs on 3 client machines, connected to the DB server machine in a simple network. Every Sunday morning (2AM) we run an Offline backup of the whole database that is scheduled via OEM, obviously this stops the instance whilst the backup is run and then restarts it afterwards.
    My question relates to what would happen with the initiation of the Offline backup if any of the client machines left a session/connection to the database open ??
    Would the backup be delayed until all sessions/connections had timed out, or would it try to run as normal and then fail as it could not stop the instance due to the active sessions ??
    Any advice on this would be greatly appreciated.
    Thanks,
    Shaun.

    If the backup runs shutdown immediate statement, all existing transactions are rolled back, and all existing sessions are closed. You can check the database alert.log for the exact shutdown statement that has been used.

  • Aperture 3.0.2 Time Machine Backup Question

    So I recently imported my entire iPhoto Library into aperture and chose to have everything in the Aperture Library not referencing from the iPhoto Library. Either way everything went great and I'm loving it. My question has to do with when I recently backed up in Time Machine. I noticed the Time Machine backup file size was about 9gb lower then the one on my internal drive? Anyone know the reason for this? iPhoto never had any file size issues when backing up. I just wanted to make sure I wasn't doing something wrong here and if there was a way to get some drive space back that would be great as well.
    Any help is appreciated.
    Thanks

    One other thing I noticed right away was after importing my iPhoto Library over to the Aperture Library file the file size of my Aperture Library was about 8gb larger...which is a pretty considerable difference. Anyone know why this is?
    Thanks

  • IOS Backup Questions

    If there is a better place for my issue, please tell me.
    Yesterday I performed a Restore on both my iPhone 5 and iPad3.  The settings on both were for iCloud backups.  With the iPhone, I got options to choose from several iCloud backups.  I got what I selected - but that Restore did not include some items such as Camera Roll images, modifications/additions to Grocery Gadget App, weather cities, etc.
    With the iPad Restore, I was only given the option to Restore from my iMac and the most recent Backup listed was August 23, 2012 (there were maybe 6 others going back to right after the iPad3 was released - got it the first day)  The Restore included as far as I can tell everything.
    Both devices had iOSA 6.0.1, my iMac is 10.8.2
    This leaves me with  questions -
    #1  How does one get to choose the restore from location?  My iPad is backed up in the iCloud - I can see the usage from my iPhone (Settings; iCloud; Manage Storage)
    #2  Are the items stored fundamentally different with a PC vs iCloud storage?  i.e. do app settings get stored locally, but not in the cloud?  If there is no fundamental differenece, why did I get a camera roll restored from the local/iMac backup, but not the iCloud backup?
    #3  I have found the backups on my iMac and have dug far enough to know I have some old backups for devices I no longer own -- like the Original iPad and an iPhone 4.  Is there any reason to keep these?  Any danager in deleting all of them?  How do I determine which BU goes with which device?
    #4  iOS Backup Extractor is one tool for retrieving images form these backups.  Are others better or commonly recommended?
    #5  Is there any downside with forcing a local Backup on my iPhone and then using the clould at a later date? Based on my experience it would seem the local Backup has more data.
    Gordon
    Atlanta, GA
    USA

    If you get the message "Backup not successful",  I had the same problem.
    My solution was to turn off some apps (Settings>iCloud>Storage & Backup>manage Storage, tap my device name in the Backups section, then look under Backup options) and try a manual backup.  If it didn't work, turn off a few more apps and try a backup.  Keep doing that until the backup works.  Then try adding in some of the last batch of apps that were previously turned off - the objective is to find the app that causes the backup to fail.  For me, I suspect that the one app I found had a bad data file that, when included in the backup, caused the backup to quit.
    This can be a long process if you have a lot of apps that you originally turned on for backups.

  • ICloud backup questions?

    Quick question- I see a message that says my phone needs to be locked for iCloud to back up all my stuff? Is that true? or will it back up if I'm using it? I will be going to get a new iPhone very soon so I want to make sure all my data is backed up. Also, approx how long will this take if i only have mail, contacts, photos and music being backed up?

    To back up your phone manually:
    Connect the device to a power source and make sure that you are also connected to the Internet via Wi-Fi.
    Go to Settings > iCloud > Storage & Backup and tap Back Up Now.
    Depending on the speed of your connection, & the amount of data, an initial iCloud backup can take several hours or more.
    Automatic backups to iCloud require your phone be connected to a power source, wifi, & the screen locked.

  • IPad Backup Question

    So I owned an iPad 2 32GB model. It had roughly 6GB of songs, apps, etc and 20GB of pictures (from iPhoto)... I'm looking to upgrade to the iPad '3' 16GB model.. My question is can I restore it from the backup of my old model.. and then choose not to sync the pictures unto it so it's not overcapacitied? If you understand..

    In that case you should be fine. Settings, app data, etc, are exactly the things that are part of the backup.
    To make the restore from backup smoother, I would suggest reducing synced items on the current iPad to below 15 GB. It will avoid a "not enough space to sync" error essage when you're setting up the new one.
    Enjoy it!

  • Icloud backup question

    Need some help understanding how iCloud backup works.  I have a 200GB plan which I purchased yesterday.   I did the full backup (including photos).    My device stats right now are USED = 22.9GB, AVAILABLE = 33.1GB.    iCloud Storage shows TOTAL STORAGE = 200GB, AVAILABLE STORAGE = 192GB.
    When I click into “Manage Storage” (iCloud)  it shows there are “Backups” of iPhone = 2.9GB, iPad = 2.6GB.  
    When I click into “iPhone” it shows “Next Backup Size” of 13.4GB.   The first item on the list of items to be backed up under “Next Backup Size” is my Photo Library at 10.4GB.
    So, the question is…. Why didn’t my Photo Library backup when I did the first backup yesterday?   I had also manually clicked "Back Up Now" a little bit after the initial backup ran. 
    Note:  I have an iPhone 5s running 8.1.3 (12B466)
    Thanks!!!!

    When it comes to photos, use iCloud for syncing between devices (photo stream), but don't rely on saving photos in an icloud backup - too many users have reported losing photos when performing a restore.
    The golden rule of saving/archiving photos is ...
    You should be importing all pics taken with the iphone/iPad to your computer regularly as you would with any digital camera.
    iOS: Importing personal photos and videos from iOS devices to your computer

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