Title: How to use multiple drives with Time Machine for redundant backups Post by: HCK on October 26, 2018, 04:05:17 pm How to use multiple drives with Time Machine for redundant backups
<article> <section class="page"> <p>When you create a backup system for your data, duplication is the best course of action. I don’t mean duplicating the files—that’s a requirement—but duplicating the destinations to which files are bound.</p><p>Every form of backup media is destined to fail, and despite high reliability from cloud-backup services, you can’t put all your faith that any of them will always be perfect. Even a system with “five nines” of reliability (99.999 percent) may suffer a loss, and the universe might pick you to experience that loss.</p><p>The rule of thumb is summarized as 3-2-1: three copies of your data, two of them local, and one offsite. One copy is your live version on your active drives; one can be a Time Machine backup; and the offsite one can be either a cloud backup, or your files stored somewhere securely and regularly rotate with the local backup.</p><p class="jumpTag"><a href="/article/3313651/macs/how-to-use-multiple-drives-with-time-machine-for-redundant-backups.html#jump">To read this article in full, please click here[/url]</p></section></article> Source: How to use multiple drives with Time Machine for redundant backups (https://www.macworld.com/article/3313651/macs/how-to-use-multiple-drives-with-time-machine-for-redundant-backups.html#tk.rss_all) |