Windows 10 Upgraded? Check Your Backup Software!

Windows 10 Download Status

The free upgrades to Windows 10 ended this morning, around 6am Eastern, or midnight at the International Date Line. What to do now? Well, hold on tight for the ‘Anniversary Update’, coming next week. And you can tweak Windows 10 to skip showing ads; look for ‘Windows ppotlight’ in Settings, Personalization, Lock Screen, and choose a picture instead. And turn off “Get fun facts, tips, tricks and more on your lock screen.” At best, it’s clutter on a locked computer’s screen, at worst, well we’ll see how that develops.

Backups Still Working?

More important than the inevitable new-software tweaks, however, are to check your backup software. That means start the program, and see if it works; some older versions of backup software are being detected as dangerous in version 10. Update to the current version as-needed.

Now go and look at the actual backups, and restore a few files. Does it still work as it should?

Notifications icon in Windows 10Operating system updates are a big deal. Windows deleted some programs and apps during the upgrade. Some of them, it warned you, well, after the fact, that it had removed them, by a chirp and a notification in the bottom-right of the screen. You can read those again–click the notifications icon, immediately left of the clock.

Missing Stuff?

Most of the deletions that I’ve heard about or seen have been software tools used by repair techs and consultants like myself. Anyone using those won’t have a problem reinstalling the latest version. But XP Mode is gone! That’s not news, XP Mode wasn’t available in Windows 8 or 8.1, either, but it was a separate downloadable add-on for Windows 7, from Microsoft, and there’s no notice that it was removed.

XP Mode was basically Windows XP in a box. It was handy for running an old program that isn’t compatible with Windows 7. If you lost XP Mode, switch to Oracle VirtualBox instead. It’s free, faster, and runs in Windows 10. You have to provide your own operating system to load inside VirtualBox; there are plenty of online guides on how to do that.

Backup Glossary: Pick Two Types

by Jerry Stern
PC Systems Consultant, PC410.com
Westminster, Maryland

I’ve explained image backups here a few times, but a refresher is due: An image backup records the contents of an entire hard drive. It’s like a snapshot, so that if the drive stops working, the image can be copied back onto a replacement drive.

It’s a misleading term, because backup software products, mostly, don’t have that option. They each have a few options, and then the large-business products add more. It’s complex, but remember that two of these backup types are all you need, with one of them out of the building.

  • File Sync:  This is an uncompressed copy of a set of folders to a backup location. It’s a cheap version of replication, for documents only. For a very small network, the drive used as the backup can be switched into use as a very basic file server in a few minutes.
  • System Backup: Usually, this is a backup of Windows, the ‘C:’ partition, and documents and data stored in the default ‘Users’ folders. It doesn’t include the contents of other drive letters. This works as an image backup if the computer’s drive has no additional drive letters.

hard-drive-to-backup

  • Disk Backup: This is close to an image backup, but usually not reliable for bootable drives like C:, because not all backup software will restore the boot settings.
  • File Backup: Choose your folders. It’s a very targeted backup.
  • Replication: This is a virtual copy of a server, usually saved to a NAS/network-attached drive, or a SAN/storage-area-network (same thing, but more of them). When a server fails, the virtual copy can replace the original as an online (local or cloud) copy of the original server, and work well enough to make do until a new server can be put in place.
    Advantage over the other backup types: Speed, under 5 minutes downtime. Disadvantage: Cost: Around $200 per month for a single server, plus a pricey high-end network-attached drive.
  • Cloud Backup: That’s backup to backup servers on the internet, and it can run either nightly, or it can backup documents all day as you edit, and generally keeps multiple versions. Best for document backups, but not practical for image/system backups, because the volume of data to upload would be too large in most offices; it would use up all your data allowance on your internet connection, even on cable, which is usually limited to 250 Gb per month.

Way too many options, right? Again, most offices should pick two.

The choices are based on a few factors:

  • What risks you expect: Drive failures and cryptoware are the same problem, on one computer–everything is missing. Both require full-image backups and document backups. For a small network, replication of the file server is a better strategy.
  • What you back up: Documents and databases are handled in different ways, and the best backup for ‘nothing but spreadsheets’ is not adequate for a database.
  • How much you back up: How many users’ documents need to be backed up.
  • How much down time you can afford: How long until you need to be back in business after the lightning strike?
  • How many offices you have: Two offices can backup to each other, like a private cloud.
  • How much data you can afford to lose: If your answer is ‘one day of data entry’, nearly any nightly backup will work. If it’s ‘one second’ of work, you’re probably running a multi-national airline, and there are multi-continent real-time synchronization and automatic load-balancing and failure management systems for that, with more acronyms and unclear names.

So Who are these Black Swans, Anyway?

Black Swans
Black Swans are like Monty Python’s Spanish Inquisition: NO ONE expects it. You’re watching birds on a lake. There are ducks. Geese. Maybe a pink heron. Based on where you are, you can guess what birds could show up. Some are rare, most aren’t. But no one expects the Black Swan. So in military tactics analysis and business continuity planning, it’s the attack or the failure that statistically wasn’t even calculated; it just wasn’t even considered.

You can’t plan for a Black Swan. For computer disaster preparation, you plan for hard drive failures, lightning strikes, burglaries. Floods in wet areas, exploding sprinkler heads in cold areas. Tornadoes in Kansas. But there’s no expecting a black swan event; if you knew what it was, it would not be a black swan event. The overall problem is this: You know what you know. You have no clue what you don’t.

Superstorm Sandy? Yes, to some extent. Hurricane planning covered that for all but the areas hit hardest–it was close enough that for all but the worst-hit areas, a hurricane plan covered it.

Snowmageddon I and II ? Well, central Maryland clearly didn’t plan for over 7 feet of snow during serial blizzards. Snow-induced roof collapses aren’t typical around here. No, that’s weren’t typical. We’ve had practice now, might be ready next time.
Snowmageddon I
So how do you plan for a generic group of natural or man-made disasters that you can’t plan for? You have to make a few assumptions:

  • Management and staff of the business will survive, mostly, but transportation and communication may not allow you to evaluate that.
  • The local business environment for the business will be viable after the event, at some point.
  • Suppliers and service providers will be up and running, if remote enough.

With these assumptions, which by the very nature of black swans, may be completely wrong, we could have some starting points:

  • Your staff should know to call in as “can’t make it in” even if it’s obvious that “there’s no way anybody could ever make it in. Period.” and they should know in advance who to call at home to check in, and who is the backup person to call at home. Or better yet, the out-of-state contact person collecting and relaying messages.
  • If the business location still exists, and still has power and communications, planning in advance for teleworking would have been a good idea, if you had planned for the black swan of all mothers of blizzards to park on top of you. In good times, telework is an employment perk. In bad times, it’s business survival.
  • If you had set up telephone forwarding options in advance, that can be turned on remotely, you would be less miserable now. If your plans were flexible enough to work when the cell towers have no power or are overwhelmed with traffic, even better.
  • Computer data backups that can be accessed remotely are ideal. Some cloud systems can do that, others can’t. But the black birds on your roof won’t let you go set it up right now. (It’s crows this time, maybe a vulture…) Plan ahead.

Computer data backups that are in your office, if said office still exists, have all the hypothetical power of Schrödinger’s Cat. They may (or may not) be there, or be wet/frozen/fried/zapped, or liquified. They might wait for you. Might currently be migrating across the ocean on a garbage island floating away from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, along with a flock of blackened sea gulls. Cloud backups would be a better choice, if they’re really, really ‘cloud’ and set up in advance.

So let’s pause and explain what a ‘cloud’ is. In scientific terms, a cloud is a geographically-redundant and geographically-distributed set of computer servers for some combination of either storage or computation. “A server in Cleveland” is not “the cloud.” A SET of backup servers in at least two locations, with automatic fail-over and duplication, is minimally a cloud. The internet is not the cloud any more than the moon is the solar system. There are many moons in the solar system, but the parts are not individually the sum. So if you hear ‘cloud’, ask ‘how many continents are the servers on?’ You will likely hear a reply of either zero content, like “it’s all up there somewhere”, or “the data is stored in our own data centers based in these three cities, and they’re in different time zones.” If that scale is appropriate for the scale of your operations, great. If not, get a real cloud service provider.

So can you plan for the bird that doesn’t exist? We might hope for some other bird, maybe the Bluebird of Happiness, instead, but dealing with good things doesn’t require dark thoughts and redundant data storage. Black Swans can be planned for, by being ready for all the little disasters we understand, and guessing they’ll stack up someday. The really big black swan? Well, we won’t ever really know about that one until it arrives.