Mar 13, 2009

Review : Paragon Drive Copy & One-Click Backup 2009 disk management and backup software

Review : Paragon Drive Copy & One-Click Backup 2009 disk management and backup software
Vista compatible: Yes
Manufacturer: Phoenix Software


Verdict:
Good points
* Simple and intuitive wizards
* Can backup to DVD
Bad points
* Needs plentiful storage space
Overall Well designed and easy to use if you have the space.


Drive Copy and One-Click Backup is a complete package for those who want graphical control over storage and backup management tasks.

Drive Backup 9 Professional is the Windows utility supplied with the software. It offers a good range of backup and disk management tasks and an intuitive wizard-based interface.

This version offers some useful new features: we were impressed by the ability to make sector-based backups for quick recovery, which you can supplement with incremental file-based backups to save space on backup media. You can also recover Windows Vista or 2008 Server to a new hardware configuration after replacing a failed component, and there is support for multiple OSs through the GUID Partition Table (GPT).

Drive Backup puts tasks in a pending operations list until you confirm, a useful defence against deleting or overwriting data. You can clone a hard disk, backup or restore from a PBF (Paragon Backup Format) file with a few clicks, or choose more specialised disk operations.

You can boot from the CD, too. However, used and unused hard disk space is shown in virtually the same shade of blue, and hard disks aren’t referred to consistently between Paragon Drive Backup 9, CD operation, Windows and error reporting.

Better diagnostics, error reporting and signposting would improve this product. When trying to save a 15GB boot disk image to a larger disk, Drive Backup returned an uninformative ‘I/O error on hard disk 5’, and frustratingly referred us to Checkdisk to fix a minor cluster fault with an iTunes temp file.

The ease of use and the powerful features across a range of media and operating systems make this useful for managing backups and files, especially over a small multiplatform network.



Most of us who use our computers regularly will find that it's inevitate, from time to time, to format the computer's hard disk and install a clean version of Windows.

It is certainly satisfying to get back to the PC’s initial speed, but restoring programs, drivers, documents and settings certainly isn’t. So Paragon's Drive Copy & One Click Backup offers a selection of tools to circumvent this laborious task.

The pair of programs will copy the entire contents of a hard disk to a separate partition of the disk, an external hard disk or a set of writable DVDs. The user can then restore the computer to its previous state with all the original files, programs and settings intact. This can be done either directly from Windows or by inserting the writable DVDs, should the computer fail to start for some reason.
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This is all very well, but the problem is that duplicating the entire contents of the average hard disk takes a huge amount of space. Even using the program’s best compression setting (which itself increases processing time) our modest 50GB of data still amounted to 25GB, and not everyone will be able to spare this.

That said, it was very easy to back up our test computer to a clutch of writeable DVDs with a couple of clicks, using the program's wizard. The programs also allow you to copy the contents of the existing hard disk to a new one which is useful if you want to upgrade.

All tasks within the programs are wizard-driven and this makes backing up and copying data simple. Thankfully, there is no need to redo the backup on the entire hard disk every time you add to it or make changes, as it includes what are called incremental backups, saving only the changes made since the last one. This can be set up to occur regularly, as can any other backup or copying tasks.

However, we would have liked to have had the option to backup selected files, as many users won’t have the space to backup their entire hard disks. If you have, though, it could make backing up much easier.


Sourcs : pcw.co.uk

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