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57 of 61 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
It really is an external hard drive, August 30, 2005
This review is from: Maxtor E01G300 OneTouch II 300 GB External Hard Drive (Electronics)
I don't understand the comment about not being able to access individual files or folders: of course you can. If you couldn't, it wouldn't be much of a backup.
The backup software that comes with it (Dantz's Retrospect Express HD) offers two choices: comprehensive backup (recommended) and "duplicate". Both choices let you specify the folders and files you back up. I elected to back up My Documents and all subfolders.
Comprehensive allows you to set a schedule for automatic backups. I chose that, and I run backups every night. The first backup took about an hour, but then each night it back ups only *changes*, so it's very quick. This also allows you to select a restore point if you want to restore a file or folder: you can pick to restore the most recent backup of the file or folder, or the one from a week ago, or three days ago, etc. Once you've picked the backup point for a restore, you can then select the folder(s) or file(s) to restore. The list of files is alphabetic, which makes sense.
Duplicate backup just makes a disk copy of the files: you get the usual structure that you can see via Windows Explorer, and you can restore by a copy command. But Duplicate overwrites the previous duplicate (so no restore points: you just get the last backup, period), and it does not allow you to set a backup schedule.
A couple of points I learned from the Dantz support forum, which has been quite helpful: you want to turn OFF the (OS) monitoring of the Maxtor. In older systems you can do this with Device Manager: right-click the My Computer icon on the desktop. But in my Windows XP Pro, there's no My Computer icon on the desktop: it's now on the start menu. To get the tabbed display that you're used to, hold down the Windows key and press Pause/Break. (Obvious?)
I really like this unit and 300GB offers LOTS of restore points. (When Retrospect Express HD runs out of room on the drive, it starts dropping the oldest restore points.) Even with comprehensive backup, you DO have access to files and folders, but not through Windows Explorer: you use the "Restore" option.
David Pogue of the NY Times recently had a bad hard drive crash. In talking with the tech attempting to recover the data, he was told that ALL hard drives crash--the question is when, not whether. Beware. You DO need a backup. This device and software offers a very easy way to have it.
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108 of 121 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Dual use Linux boot / Windows XP backup, January 23, 2005
This review is from: Maxtor E01G300 OneTouch II 300 GB External Hard Drive (Electronics)
Goals
1. Have a drive that could be easily be moved between Linux systems for large data transfer.
2. Provide a dual boot capability for Linux/XP without touching my existing NTFS system drive
3. Provide a shared FAT partition that could be used both to move data between the two environments.
4. Backups of the XP system.
Procedure
1. Drive installed on XP without difficulty (USB2) and drive was immediately available.
2. Rebooted from a 2nd IDE drive (moved IDE cable) that had a working Linux installation.
3. I repartitioned Onetouch drive using Linux fdisk with one DOS partition.
4. Transferred Linux installation to drive using rsync
5. Followed procedure given in various usergroup postings (Maxtor provides no support for Linux). Installed 2 stage boot loader (Grub) onto Onetouch drive
6. Removed Linux IDE drive and replace XP IDE drive.
7. System wouldn't boot Linux properly. Turned out that Grub polling of the hard disk order doesn't correctly anticipate the situation when you use the flash USB boot option in the bios. Easily fixed by changing grub.conf manually.
8. Dimension 4600 has bias support for a flash USB drive and by just selecting that option from the boot menu the Maxtor now booted Linux from Onetouch without a problem. Using the standard IDE boot gave me the existing Windows XP install
9. Found I couldn't access the FAT partition (this is probably and XP issue). Had to create a smaller 32Gig partition and format it in Windows to make it accessible.
10. FAT Partition now visible to both OSs.
Comments (in no particular order)
1. Stylish design
2 Drive is warm to the touch (unless in standby). I would imagine mounting it vertically on the supplied base is important for good cooling. I have found if I run the drive steadily for a few hours (e.g. a massive file transfer) it gets warmer.
3. Works as advertised so far
4. Dual boot for Linux went very well
5. Near silent until accessed, drive noise not excessive
6. With only a few hours work, it met all my expectations so can't really ask more than that.
7. Can't comment on reliability (haven't had it long enough)
8. Includes both Firewire and USB2 cables
9. Can't comment on the quality of the bundled software as I haven't used it.
10. When used on the Linux ext3 filesystem it achieved somewhere between 50% and 75% of the speed of a high performance internal IDE. This is likely OS dependent.
I appreciate this is not a mainstream use but thought there might be someone out there trying to do something similar. I don't often feel this positive about a product hence taking the time to write a review.
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26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Be Vigilant!, November 19, 2005
This review is from: Maxtor E01G300 OneTouch II 300 GB External Hard Drive (Electronics)
I use this as one of my backup drives on a Mac OSX machine. I actually have 2 backups one being redundant. When adding external drives to any Mac they should always be reformatted with disk utility. After I formatted them and started to use them, they would crash my machine when they were both on. After talking to the Maxtor support it was determined that all I needed was a different type of driver that I accessed from their website. There is no such thing as a perfect brand of hard drive they all suffer from the same problems. I have known people who have had maxtors for over 10 years with no problems. sometimes you get a lemon and they crap out after 3 weeks. It happens to all of the manufacturers. The point of all this rambling is be vigilant! Do multiple backups of the things that are truly irreplaceable. Pictures should be archived to CD or DVD at least 2 times a year. All it takes is to lose the first 3 years of you children's life to pound this concept home. As for the hard drive you can choose any reputable brand and be reasonably certain that it will be OK. Just don't get USB 1.0 like I did with my first drive. It took 2 days to backup 150gig. It will be tempting to just go with the lowest priced drive if they are the same capacity, but the lower priced drives are USB 1.0. You should buy the largest capacity that you can afford and go with Firewire or USB 2.0
Personally I don't use the backup button or the retrospect software. I use Backup from apple, but I have heard it works just fine.
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