Backing up » History » Version 2
Steve Welburn, 2012-08-22 02:35 PM
1 | 1 | Steve Welburn | h1. Backing up |
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2 | 1 | Steve Welburn | |
3 | 1 | Steve Welburn | h2. Why back up your data ? |
4 | 1 | Steve Welburn | |
5 | 1 | Steve Welburn | * Hard disks die |
6 | 1 | Steve Welburn | * Portable devices can be lost or broken |
7 | 1 | Steve Welburn | * Disasters happen |
8 | 1 | Steve Welburn | |
9 | 1 | Steve Welburn | h2. How to back up data |
10 | 1 | Steve Welburn | |
11 | 1 | Steve Welburn | The core principle is that backup copies of data should be stored in a different location to the main copy. |
12 | 1 | Steve Welburn | |
13 | 1 | Steve Welburn | If you delete your local copy of the data then the primary copy will be the original backup... is that copy backed up anywhere ? |
14 | 1 | Steve Welburn | |
15 | 1 | Steve Welburn | Suitable locations for backups are: |
16 | 1 | Steve Welburn | * A firesafe |
17 | 1 | Steve Welburn | * A network copy |
18 | 1 | Steve Welburn | ** An network drive e.g. provided by the institution |
19 | 1 | Steve Welburn | ** Internet storage (in the cloud) |
20 | 1 | Steve Welburn | ** A data repository - this could be a public thematic / institutional repository for publishing completed research datasets, or an internal repository for archiving datasets during research |
21 | 2 | Steve Welburn | * A portable device / portable media which you keep somewhere other than under your desk |