CCC vs SuperDuper on MacBook Pro

I haven't been an OS X user long enough to have developed preferences for imaging software. I used CCC on my iBooks and have been using it on my MBP until today. Today I found the universal binary for SuperDuper and decided to try it to clone my MBP harddrive. CCC remains Rosetta translated while SuperDuper is now UB. I expected SD to be faster; it wasn't. In fact, SuperDuper took twice as long to clone my MBP HD as the Rosetta translated CCC. Despite that, I was impressed by the range of options available in the paid version of SuperDuper. The "free versions" are pretty equivalent in functionality. Are there any of you out there that have real world experience with both of these programs to help me decide which one, in the end, will come through consistently and reliably when I need it? If speed were the only issue, I'd stick with CCC, but with the possibility of incremental clones, SD seems like a good possibility.
What thinketh you from your own personal experiences.
P.S. the price difference is immaterial to me.

SuperDuper is very well supported and does incremental imaging which is a huge time saver and I believe is unique among Macintosh imaging programs. I have been using it for almost 2 years as I needed to find a very reliable imaging program as I was using Ghost and then Acronis on the PC. It is the sole program that I found that is feature complete with Ghost and Acronis TrueImage. It also does scheduled imaging. The product gets upgraded regularly and the developer is very responsive. They also have an online forum that is attended by the developer. It has saved my butt on more than one occasion. I recommend it wholeheartedly.
HTH,
Steve

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    cwgonzalez1192
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    (Free superduper APP above)
    CCC App
    http://www.bombich.com/

  • My MacBook Pro has been incredibly slow and laggy

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    Video Information: ?
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    Color LCD 1280 x 800
    System Software: ?
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    Disk Information: ?
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    Apple Computer, Inc. IR Receiver
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    Apple Inc. Bluetooth USB Host Controller
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    Apple Inc. thunderbolt_bus
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    FlashPlayer-10.6: Version: 15.0.0.152 - SDK 10.6 Support
    Flash Player: Version: 15.0.0.152 - SDK 10.6 Support
    QuickTime Plugin: Version: 7.7.1
    JavaAppletPlugin: Version: 14.6.0 - SDK 10.8 Check version
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    iSightAudio: Version: 7.7.1 - SDK 10.8
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    3rd Party Preference Panes: ?
    Flash Player  Support
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         0% activitymonitord
         0% blued
    Top Processes by Memory: ?
    57 MB mds
    37 MB Dock
    33 MB WindowServer
    25 MB ocspd
    20 MB SystemUIServer
    Virtual Memory Information: ?
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    578 MB Active RAM
    401 MB Inactive RAM
    1.13 GB Wired RAM
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    If your computer seems to be running slower here are some things you can do:
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  • Macbook pro won't restart after time machine install on new hard drive

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    Carbon Copy Cloner - Home
    www.bombich.com/
    SuperDuper!
    www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/ 
    added a good reference
    http://Pondini.org/TM/Home.html

  • Time machine back up and deleting photos from macbook pro

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    Backing up the offload disk is where partitioning the backup drive can be handy.  Create one partition for your Time Machine backup and another partition for your external drive backup.  Backup your internal drive with Time Machine and backup the offloaded files using cloning software such as Carbon Copy Cloner or SuperDuper!
    You could tell Time Machine to backup both your internal and external live files but then it gets tricky to do a full restore so I recommend using cloning software for backing up the external drive.
    When you purchase another external drive, make it a sufficiently large one so you can divide it into multiple large partitions.
    A good backup/offload map (two partitions per backup drive):
    - Internal drive —> Time Machine backup partition A on the backup drives.
    - External offload drive —> Clone backup partition B on the backup drives.
    - Backup drives 1 and  2 (one onsite and one offsite), each with partitions A and B.
    A great backup scheme includes three partitions on the large backup drives so you can backup the the internal drive with both Time Machine and CCC/SD:
    - Internal drive —> Time Machine backup partition A on the backup drives.
    - External offload drive —> Clone backup partition B on the backup drives.
    - Internal drive —> Clone backup to partition C on the backup drives.
    - Backup drives 1 and  2 (one onsite and one offsite), each with partitions A, B and C.
    A great feature of having a clone of your internal drive is if the internal drive crashes you can boot off of the backup disk while you replace the internal drive.  As mentioned above it also avoids Time Machine backup/restore problems.  I have had Time Machine full restores fail so I do not trust them as my only backup method but I find them very handy for restoring individual files.
    Create partitions sufficiently large enough for each backup source.  Time Machine should be about 50% or more larger than the volume it is backing up to leave room for the older incremental backups.  The cloned backup partitions need only be as large as the volumes they are backing up, or larger if you include incremental backups in your cloning scheme.  This means you may need 2 or 3 TB backup drives.  (4 TB drives are not yet reliable so avoid them.)
    For more information on great backup schemes see:
    Time Machine Basics: http://support.apple.com/kb/ht1427
    Most commonly used backup methods: 
    https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-3045
    Methodology to protect your data.  Backups vs. Archives.  Long-term data protection:
    https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-6031
    PlotinusVeritas gives some great suggestions for purchasing external hard drives in this thread:
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/5602141?tstart=0

  • How do i copy all files from my macbook pro to an external lacie hard drive?

    Hi,
    I need to sell my macbook pro 17" 2007 but want to save all files to an external lacie hard drive. What the best way to do this please?

    Consider these options...
    SuperDuper  http://www.shirt-pocket.com/
    or CCC  http://www.bombich.com/
    Which create a Bootable Clone of your existing Hard Drive...

  • How to migrate to new macbook pro

    Hello.
    I have two MBPs. I've cloned the older's HD onto a LaCie 1TB portable drive. So my question is this. What is the best way to transfer all my old "stuff", to the new Macbook Pro? I'd like to do it as easy as possible, so that I don't have to re-enter passwords for email, website, etc. I'd like all my settings to be exactly as they were on the old machine. Also, will my applications transfer as well?
    thanks so much

    They should work fine.
    For regular backup CCC is an excellent choice. Others include:
    Backup Software Recommendations
    Carbon Copy Cloner
    Data Backup
    Deja Vu
    Silver Keeper
    Retrospect
    Super Flexible File Synchronizer
    SuperDuper!
    Synchronize Pro! X
    Synk Pro
    Synk Standard
    Tri-Backup
    Others may be found at VersionTracker or MacUpdate.
    Visit The XLab FAQs and read the FAQ on backup and restore.  Also read How to Back Up and Restore Your Files.

  • Help only have 14 gb left of 500 gb on MacBook Pro. Can I upgrade to 1Tb?

    Help only have 14 gb left of 500 gb on MacBook Pro. Can I upgrade to 1Tb? (I purchased it August 2010) If not any suggestions to increase storage. Majority of my 500 gb is Desktop (assuming that is mainly snow leopard?) pictures and music. Don't really want to delete any of that.

    extremely easy, see ifixit.com  on a 10 scale its a 2
    And mende is right, dont consider data archives of important info via wifi, and its slow.   That you "can" doesnt mean you "should"
    #1  You can just CLONE the original internal drive, you dont have to "install" anything.
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    3 clone internal HD to target HD or SSD (external) [takes about 40 mins depending on size]
    4. Boot ONCE from external (go to sys. preference to boot from external) to TEST the new Clone
    5 open bottom (see videos on ifixit or youtube on same) and remove old, install new.
    (this video is for a 2012, look at this site for YOUR specific year / model)
    http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Replacing+MacBook+Pro+13-Inch+Unibody+Mid+2012+Hard+ Drive/10378/1
    Done    (FIRST TIME after installing, boot will be SLOW,...normal and ignore that).
    Clone APPS
    Superduper does not clone the recovery partition, but that is NOT necessary if you keep the original HD as a “backup clone”. Most don’t bother with the recovery partition in a clone, however that is your prerogative.
    http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/SuperDuperDescription.html
    (Free superduper APP above)
    CCC App
    http://www.bombich.com/

  • Can I upgrade to Lion on my 2 GZ Intel Core Duo MacBook Pro?

    I am running Snow Leopard on my MacBook Pro and cant seem to figure out how to upgrade to Lion.  Mountain Lion is not compatible with this machine, but maybe Lion is?  How to do this?

    You need 2 GB RAM at least, but 4 GB is a better working amount.  You can buy more RAM at macsales.com and crucial.com for proces you will like, and can find instructions for replacing it.
    Read this for application that do not work under Lion:  http://roaringapps.com/apps:table
    Make a *very* good backup before upgrading.  I suggest a clone with CarbonCopyClone ($40 download).  This will make a "bootable" backup that can be used to reload SL in case of failure during upgrade.
    There is also SuperDuper, but at last report it does not clone the "Recovery Partition" of Lion that CCC will backup.  Buying a clone package that work with Lion for future backups is a good idea.
    You can call 1-800-676-2775 to buy a download code to use in MacAppStore.
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