Comentarios de lectores/as

10 Proven Tips To Survive A Computer Crash

Sylvia Spillman (2019-07-22)

 |  Enviar respuesta

COMPUTER CRASH Do these words strike fear into you? If not, maybe they should! A computer crash is at best time consuming and expensive, and at worst a genuine business disaster. Here are things you can do now to prevent a crash and/or insure a smooth recovery whether you use your computer at work or for your personal life-or both, Iklan Slot Online like me! The first rule in minimizing computer disasters is backup. The second rule in easier data recovery is BackUp.

The third rule in computer organizing is BACKUP. I am astounded at the number of people (in large and Slot Kasino small businesses) who do not back up their work regularly. Without good backups, you risk losing everything if your hard drive goes belly-up. Start by setting all of your programs to save automatically after 2 minutes. This will protect your work against temporary freeze-ups and unplanned shutdowns. Second, plug your computer, monitor, and other electronic equipment into a UPS Battery Backup unit to protect it from power surges and outages.

A unit like this one will give you 5 minutes to save your work and shut down your computer normally if the power goes out. Then-BACK UP! (If you're not sure what the best way to back up is, keep reading.) I bought a brand new Hewlett Packard Pavilion XP system and began to back up weekly. Seven months later, I returned from making a cup of tea to hear my computer going click-click-click loudly. My hard drive had just crashed for no reason at all.

As is often the case, I lost everything on it. I felt confident because I had my data backed up by copying my entire working C-drive onto a CD-but even with backups, and even if your computer is still under warranty, let's get realistic about how much time and money a crash can end up costing you. It took four days for Slot Kasino me to get the special shipping box HP sent me to return the computer. They replaced the hard drive, and it was returned within 10 business days at no charge for repair and shipping.

This still adds up to three weeks without my computer. First, I rented a laptop and spent hours installing the programs I normally use. Laptop rental cost me $250.00 for one month, with a $500 refundable deposit. I could have rented a desktop system for a little less per month, but I would have had to wait a week to get the computer. It was great to have the laptop to use until my repaired computer arrived.

But, I had to go through the same restoration process again when it was returned with a new hard drive. More time lost and more frustration, too. Second, I spent hours importing my data from backup CDs. I still lost almost a week's worth of data (Quicken entries, Word documents, calendar and contact information) because that's how long I go between backups.

Añadir comentario



ISSN: 19915837