Category Archives: Software

Home Network Backup Advice Sought

I’m planning to add a computer to my home network which will act as a combination of a media server and backup for our other desktops. It’s going to have two or three Very Big Disks, with only the media partition backed up locally. All the other disks and partitions will be used only to back up other computers on the network. I’d been toying with buying a purpose-built NAS, but they seem temperamental, or expensive, or sometimes both, and this just seams easier and cheaper.

But I’m unsure exactly how to set this up. Ideally I would download or even buy some sort of tool which would load on the machines that need to be backed up and would automagically image the desktops in the dead of night and have a restore function I could run from a floppy or a CD. This dream tool would create a new image once a month, say, and incremental backups nightly. Each new image would, I suppose, have to overwrite the old one, as even the Very Big Disks are not going to be big enough to host multiple images from the many pretty big disks lurking on the various machines on our network.

Most of the machines that need backing up are running Win XP SP2, but one is dual-booting XP SP2 with SUSE, one runs SUSE alone, and one runs Ubuntu. For starters I’m most concerned with copying the XP2 machines and partitions, since they have work stuff on them, but in the long term I expect to transition the household to some flavor of Linux since Vista doesn’t seem acceptable. (There may be a holdout gaming machine for the kids if they are sufficiently persuasvie.)

I have a licensed copy of Win XP currently installed on the server-to-be. Inertia has an edge, but I could scrub it an put in some flavor of Linux. I’ve read both good and bad things about Norton Ghost 10.0 and Acronis, but little good about how either work for backing up to a network drive as opposed to attached storage. The feedback on Ghost suggests that the new version doesn’t image, and that the old one, which does, wants to be run from a floppy — that’s not a standalone, run in the background app. Worse, I fear I’d need one copy per machine I’m backing up — that gets expensive!

I found a list of Free Hard Disk / Partition Imaging and Cloning Software, but I don’t really want to trust something this critical to an unknown tool.

I don’t much like to bleg, but if anyone is doing this at home and has advice or pointers, I’d be grateful for it.

Posted in Software | 4 Comments

Beware Stale Adobe

Adobe Reader versions before 8.0 are now considered dangerous. Get your 8.0 here.

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Cooliris: A Fun Firefox (etc.) Extension

Once in a while Lifehacker’s Download of the Day is something neat. Today is one of those days, as they have Cooliris Preview (IE/Firefox/Safari):

Simply mouse over any link or thumbnail image, then point to the little Cooliris icon that appears next to it. In a second or two you’ll see a pop-up window containing the page, image, or even video. This isn’t just a screenshot, however you can actually play the video or interact with the page, clicking links, filling out forms, etc.

Best. Extension. Ever? It might just be. Cooliris changes the way you interact with the Web, and for the better. Cooliris Previews 2.0 is free for Internet Explorer, Firefox, and Safari browsers.

Get Cooliris for firefox here. I’m having fun with it.

Posted in Software | 1 Comment

Firefox 2.0 – Maybe Next Week

OK, this is pretty impressive. Almost all of the 26 Firefox
extensions I have installed at home are already ready for 2.0. 

Only seven extensions I currently have installed are not ready.  Of these two are just frills (Shazou and Timetracker).  Spelling is built in, so
I won’t need Spellbound.

Of the other four that are not yet ready, there is one which I’ll certainly miss but can manage without (Autofill). There is really only one showstopper — TabMix Plus. And the developer of that says he needs a week or so to get it ready.  So it looks like I will only
have to wait a week or so to upgrade to 2.0.

Here’s the list of what I use with info on upgrade status
drawn from the amazing Bill’s
Big List of Firefox® 2.0 Compatible Extensions

Ready
for 2.0

Adblock
Plus

Chatzilla
CoLT
del.icio.us
Complete 1.3

Download
Statusbar 0.9.4

dragdropupload
1.5.21

EditCSS
0.3.6

ErrorZilla
Mod 0.1.1

Extended
Statusbar 1.2.5

FireFTP
0.94.4

Gmail
Space 0.5.1

Googlepedia
0.4.1

gTranslate
0.3

MR Tech
Local Install 5.3.1.1

ScrapBook
1.2.0.6

Searchbar
Autosizer 1.1.2

Video
Downloader 2.0

View
Source Chart 2.4.05

X-Ray
0.8.1

Not
(officially)
ready for 2.0

  1. Autofill
  2. Bugmenot 
  3. Shazou
  4. The functionality of Spellbound is, I gather, built in to
    2.0
  5. TabmixPlus is not
    ready yet, but should
    be ready Real Soon Now
     

    I REALIZE THAT FIREFOX 2
    IS GOING TO BE RELEASE ON TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24.
    A NEW VERSION OF TAB MIX PLUS IS GOING TO BE RELEASE SHORTLY AFTER
    THAT, IN LESS THAN A WEEK. PLEASE BE PATIENT, FOR NOW YOU CAN TRY THIS
    VERSION EARLY.
    http://tmp.garyr.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=3515

  6. Timetracker
  7. Wayback (but this is somewhat obsoleted by ErrorZilla)
Posted in Software | 1 Comment

Firefox 2.0

Firefox 2.0 is now available for download from this Index of page. Starting tomorrow firefox users should get automated downloads or reminders.

Personally, I’m going to hold off for a few days until I know that my favorite plugins have compatibility updates.

UPDATE: In her comment below, Cathy Gellis points out that the Mozilla folks are asking people not to download this version this way for good and interesting reasons.

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Told You So

First IE7 vulnerability identified.

Posted in Software | 1 Comment