System Backup Software: Do You Need Granular Features?

Jun 10
11:17

2011

Robert Schumann

Robert Schumann

  • Share this article on Facebook
  • Share this article on Twitter
  • Share this article on Linkedin

When you are searching for the right system backup software program, you no doubt have a lot of options to choose from. There are some solutions available to you that offer you pretty basic features, and these may be fine if you just want a very basic program. Then again, there are also some more complex, advanced programs available to you as well.

mediaimage
Sorting through the features and benefits that each one offers and then determining which offers you the best mix of features for the price can be difficult to say the least. However,System Backup Software: Do You Need Granular Features?  Articles as you sort through the features, you will absolutely want to ensure that any solution you choose gives you the ability to run both full and granular backup and recovery processes.

It is pretty clear why you would need to have the ability to run full or complete backup and recovery processes. After all, these are generally designed to provide you with a security blanket for disaster events like hardware or software failure, mass data loss due to viruses, natural disasters like floods and fires, and more. So why do you need a granular feature with your system backup software to go along with your full backup and restore feature?

If your systems are used like most systems these days, there are a handful of files that are opened, altered, and saved each and every day. These are files that are critical to operations in many cases. Other times there may be a big project, presentation, or so forth that has had hours and hours of time devoted to it, and perhaps collaboration across various departments or individuals took place in just a short amount of time. If your full backup events are scheduled to run less frequently than every night, you likely want to run a granular save procedure on such files at critical points. Further, in the event a single file needs to be recovered, you may not want to run a full backup. In fact, running a full backup may write over work that has been done to other files since the backup.

Using the right system backup software for your needs can really make or break your experience, but sometimes you don't know which features you will need until that need arises. For this reason, you will want to have system backup software working for you that has both granular and full backup capabilities.