Timeline for Time Machine with GUI for Linux Mint
Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0
5 events
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| Jun 11, 2020 at 12:04 | history | edited | CommunityBot |
Commonmark migration
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| Mar 29, 2016 at 22:27 | comment | added | Sparhawk |
@will I'm not sure what your complaints are. I've restored complete systems from Back In Time in a matter of minutes. It can be configured to do full disk backups. Better than Time Machine, it's also OS agnostic, so you can just boot into a live CD (or physically connect the internal hard drive to another system), then literally copy from a directory on your backup volume (last-snapshot) to your wiped computer. The time to restore is merely the time taken to copy files over.
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| Mar 29, 2016 at 13:55 | comment | added | will | Oddly enough, I think the question is extremely specific. I recently suffered two (x2) catastrophic hard-drive failures and my MAC-time-machine using colleagues assure me that the mean-time-to-resume-work is measured in HOURS, not days. To be honest; it is really weeks because I haven't loaded various bit-n-pieces yet that will definitely need later (e.g. an Ada compiler). The APPLE(tm) TimeMachine thing is such a useful concept; that I'm amazed nothing similar has show-up. Come-on everyone; how much would it take! Maybe we need to compare back-in-time with time-machine? | |
| Aug 14, 2015 at 10:11 | history | edited | Sparhawk | CC BY-SA 3.0 |
Respond to question's edits
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| Aug 14, 2015 at 7:00 | history | answered | Sparhawk | CC BY-SA 3.0 |