Backup Your Files With No Cloud Costs *DIY GUIDE* in English

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 17 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 12

  • @sterntechdaddy
    @sterntechdaddy  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    If you use Office 365 and have Outlook installed then... it depends what flavour of email you're using - IMAP or POP.
    For IMAP email accounts you don't need to backup the emails. They are stored on the server of the company that supplies your email. Note that Microsoft Exchange is Microsoft's version of the more general IMAP - so its a remote server based system too.
    For POP it's different. These emails are taken from the server and stored locally in PST files. By default, Outlook creates a folder in your Documents and puts the PST file there. I find this a problem because PST files can get very large over time and each time you run Outlook the PST file will change as emails arrive. The whole file gets marked as changed even if just one email arrives.
    So this script will backup the PST file every time - and if it's several GB then that will slow the backup down a lot.
    I have moved my Outlook PST file to a separate folder on C: and have a separate script to back it up. I like PST files as I have emails going back many, many years and don't really want to pay extra for a larger IMAP mailbox on my domain.
    What is important for both IMAP and POP is the autocomplete - this is the data associated with then email addresses that Outlook remembers. This data is stored in a file that starts with Stream_Autocomplete and then has a random set of letters and numbers in the name. For Office 2021 you'll find yours here:
    C:\Users\{username}\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Outlook\RoamCache
    You can add that to the script and tweak it so it gets copied too.
    ;)
    Note that if you're not sure if you''re using IMAP or POP email then you'll probably be using IMAP. Most ISP's and email services like GMail push you towards IMAP emails for a couple of reasons...
    1. Tech support is easier as front line technicians just need to know about Webmail access rather than having a detailed understanding of all the POP compatible email clients that might be on your computer.
    2. They can up sell mailboxes - as you get more emails, your mailbox can get full. You either delete them or get a bigger mailbox. Business accounts get hit by this more than home users.
    3. People are using email on multiple devices more often now. With IMAP the email on your phone and computer will fully synchronize. POP doesn't do that.
    4. Getting customers to use IMAP on their phones and tablets is much easier - you just enter the email and password and the server settings are automatically configured on the device. This is also true for IMAP accounts in when you set them up Outlook, but fiddling about with incoming and outgoing servers, their ports and security settings is really irritating on a phone if the settings aren't configured automatically!
    So most devices will use IMAP and you'll need to deliberately jump through a few configuration hoops to get POP working - both in terms of setting up Outlook, and a tweak of the mail server settings to allow POP access. I think GMail, for example, has POP access disabled by default.
    In summary, you don't need to backup IMAP emails, but you can backup POP. For both, there's autocomplete data. And you definitely should back that up.
    Hope this helps.

  • @Cloudwraith
    @Cloudwraith 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    For your backup script, you can use the variables %homedrive% and %homepath% to give you your current user path instead of having to do the replace on the &. Good video!

    • @sterntechdaddy
      @sterntechdaddy  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thanks!
      I did originally think about using environment variables, but as the script only gets setup once I thought it best to lock in the folder paths. The find/replace is also simple enough, but there's a hidden narrative to doing that.
      If the viewer can actually do the find/replace then they'll be OK with getting the script to work. It's a little competence test that also highlights and reinforces the folder locations to help the viewer learn more about their data.
      :)

  • @jaseman
    @jaseman 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I have all my data in VHDX files with bitlocker enabled. When I want to backup - I just unmount those drives and copy and paste the VHDX files to external hard drives. For my home stuff I do this once every season (Winter, Spring, Summer & Autumn). So over the year I have 4 full backups. Potentially I could lose a maximum of 3 months worth of files in a disaster situation. I could do it monthly - but I only have 4 external hard drives and I don't really want to pay for 12 of them. I never do incremental backups. The good thing is - if someone got hold of my backup drives - They won't be able to access the data without the bitlocker password.

    • @sterntechdaddy
      @sterntechdaddy  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I don't bother encrypting any of my data. There's nothing that anyone else would find interesting or profitable in it.
      😂
      Is the password written down?

  • @DrQuadrivium
    @DrQuadrivium 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Excellent.... but might have frightened the horses!

    • @sterntechdaddy
      @sterntechdaddy  3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      The horses concerned might to too big to get frightened by me. 😜

  • @worsdors
    @worsdors 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you very much ! Just one question.... can I add my outlook ? if that is possible then it is 100% perfect ! If I can do my outlook 365 can you assist me ? Congrats !

    • @sterntechdaddy
      @sterntechdaddy  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I'll pin a comment about this...
      😊

  • @alexizy7091
    @alexizy7091 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Hey I really need your help, I bought a laptop with freedos on it. I installed the windows 10 just the way you show in your another video. It can't even detect wifi and many other things in device manager, it also has no drivers whatsoever, can you help please?

    • @sterntechdaddy
      @sterntechdaddy  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      It’s unusual for Windows not to detect any kind of network device… you might need to run a cable to your router, but if the LAN port isn’t detected then I would use a USB Wi-Fi adaptor.
      Run Windows Update once you get a connection and look for the optional updates. Install all of them.
      🙂

    • @alexizy7091
      @alexizy7091 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@sterntechdaddy Thank you for the reply, I fixed it