W
WebmasterAlex
Guest
Do you back up? No matter what precautions you take the possibility of a hard drive failure or a virus infection is always there. The slammer worm that just went around infected 67,000 computers in the first TEN minutes, doubling in size every 8.5 seconds. That one was targeted at servers but there isn't any reason they couldn't write one for regular computers too.
The virus software makers can't possibly protect you in time no matter what brand you use.
Hard drives fail. I don't care what brand, how expensive or how you care for it, they are mechanical devices and subject to failures.
If you keep data on your computer, tax stuff, financial records, important email, your PHD thesis, your only positive protection is to back things up.
There are a lot of ways to do that. If your data is really important to you consider the gold standard of the IT world... tape.
Burnable DVD's hold a lot of data, CD-roms may be enough if you don't have a lot of data. Even a couple of floppy's can be a lifesaver!
I'm throwing a DVD-R in as we speak
The virus software makers can't possibly protect you in time no matter what brand you use.
Hard drives fail. I don't care what brand, how expensive or how you care for it, they are mechanical devices and subject to failures.
If you keep data on your computer, tax stuff, financial records, important email, your PHD thesis, your only positive protection is to back things up.
There are a lot of ways to do that. If your data is really important to you consider the gold standard of the IT world... tape.
Burnable DVD's hold a lot of data, CD-roms may be enough if you don't have a lot of data. Even a couple of floppy's can be a lifesaver!
I'm throwing a DVD-R in as we speak

I'd hate ter hate ter relive my experience of be'in bitten by 10 baZillion black flies ter earn my shep's coat