This has nothing to do with the recent Western Digital problem. When Ventura updated a few months ago I could no longer use the My Cloud Home on the MacBook. This was to be my own cloud backup for my all things photos which would be accessible anywhere where there is internet, and my main storage is a twin 4tb raid drive DAS connected to my MacBook. I have a WD My Cloud Home 4tb drive that works fine with my iMac, iPhone and iPad and until recently my MacBook Pro. You must be psychic as I am in the same situation and would probably have listed the topic in a week or so but I have some more fundamental questions I am trying to sort out.įor my old iMac (2009) and MacBook M1 Pro I use Timemachine for what is stored on the machines hard drive. CCC and TM used in tandem, are an ideal combination. This is why it is not considered "archival."ĬCC allows you to configure in a number of different ways how older files are handled, well beyond what TM allows. TM will, however, automatically delete and overwrite the oldest files when the drive becomes full. It is also handy for recovering files from an earlier date if you've inadvertently deleted a file or need to look at a previous version. It is primarily designed as a point-in-time backup that allows you to completely restore a Mac to its most current configuration in the event of a total hardware failure. But, it is important to remember that TM is not an "archival" backup. TM is a great program, and many people don't realize that it has different configuration options, too. I also run Time Machine to a single external 8TB drive. In the case of Armageddon, I will have bigger concerns than my backups. This system gives me as close to 100% security as is possible, short of Armageddon. No need to reinstall the drive in the original enclosure. Should I need to access a file from years ago, I have an inexpensive little device that reads a "naked" disk. OWC offers several drive enclosures allowing you to do this. When the external disks get full, I pull them out of the enclosure, label them by year, store them away, and simply install new drives which are relatively inexpensive. Make sure, however, you completely understand how CCC works before attempting this kind of setup. CCC also allows me to configure different backup protocols for each. So, I back up my startup SSD to one "drive," cleverly named "Backup SSD," and I back up all work and photo files to another "drive" on the same external, having the name "Master." This allows me to keep startup and work files separately on a single large external HD, avoiding a proliferation of disks. CCC allows me to configure two individual backup "drives" on a single external disk in a partition-like allocation. All my work files are on the aforementioned external four-disk, 12 TB RAID. I have a SSD internal in my iMac as a startup drive, containing only system files and applications. Yes, it means that I must run CCC for each disk, a bit tedious, but I really don't care since CCC runs in the background. So, I back up important files directly to individual external drives, known as JBOD (just a bunch of disks). RAIDs are great systems, and provide security in almost all cases, but they are not 100% infallible. It took out all the disks comprising my RAID. A hardware problem once wiped out a year's worth of files on a RAID external I was using. RAIDs can completely fail, which I have unfortunately experienced. While my computer's working drive is a four-disk RAID 5, I do not use a RAID system for backup. I back up photo and work files to no fewer than four external hard drives. CCC has a bit of a learning curve, but that is inevitable given the number of ways it can be configured to individual needs. Inexpensive, updated regularly (usually at no cost), and very well supported with extensive documentation. I've used CCC for almost as long as it has been around, and it is an outstanding program.
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