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| EMC Retrospect 7.5 Professional for Windows | 
enlarge | From: Dantz Category: Software
List Price: $129.00 Buy New: $80.00 You Save: $49.00 (38%)
New (18) Used (1) from $80.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 20 reviews Sales Rank: 1883
Format: Cd-rom Platforms: Windows Nt 4, Windows Xp, Windows 2000 Media: CD-ROM Edition: Professional Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Shipping Weight (lbs): 5 Dimensions (in): 118.8 x 97.2 x 18
MPN: pu10a0075 Model: PU10A0075 UPC: 093156010702 EAN: 0093156010702 ASIN: B000EHPZVI
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Complete protection for Windows desktops and notebooks | | • | Secure, reliable protection for all your information | | • | Simple, yet powerful - start your first backup in minutes | | • | Fast backups and Smart Restores with unparalleled accuracy | | • | Automated Disaster Recovery |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Retrospect Backup 7.5 offers complete protection for the used in small and midsize businesses. Your home and home office computers contain more and more personal, family, and financial data than ever -- what happens if you inadvertently delete a file, are attacked by a virus, or your computer fails? Don't lose your family photos or the only copy of your tax returns. Recover your information quickly to keep your home office running smoothly.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 15 more reviews...
So glad I bought this product December 1, 2008 I bought this as a last minute attempt to save my data because my laptop was on the verge of crashing (mental note: just because a hard drive can save 70 GB worth of information doesn't mean that it SHOULD). While it did take me all day to back up my hard drive to 14 DVDRs, I was so happy less than a week later as I needed to restore a good portion of my data. My laptop didn't crash, thank goodness, but I did lose a lot of data. I was able to pick exactly which files to restore, what I thought was really cool was I could choose where to restore to, in this case I "restored" to an 8 GB USB storage drive so I could transfer the files to my desktop.
I can't tell you how difficult it is to completely restore a computer if it crashes, but partially restoring files was incredibly simple. I didn't even need the 300 page user's manual for this task, or for the actual backup process. I am in no way a computer geek, so this was a real bonus.
Bottom line: Retrospect saved my sanity AND was incredibly simple to use.
Product works , buy it if you care about your data April 24, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I'm using this product as a backup server for files on three PCs. One workstation in the house, a family laptop, and a work laptop. I am not using it for a full hard drive/ OS recovery, just incremental backups of important files and user directories. The software is great. For the first few weeks I enabled the email feature to email me upon each backup, successful or not. Each scheduled back up worked well, how ever I had to use windows scheduler to wake up the workstation from hibernate. No problem for me, but it might be tough for a novice user. The interface took a few hours to learn, but it has everything you really need. I would not call it overly complex, but it may be a bit much for a home user. I have tested the restore on many occasions and have found it to be reliable. The reason I purchased this software was that Acronis restore failed when I tested it. I really wanted to buy the Acronis package, since its image backup has saved my bacon in the past, but the normal everyday backup was really bad. In short, I would buy this product if you need to continuously backup your files on a regular basis. I would not buy it if your intent is to restore a complete OS.
Something to trust your valuable data to March 29, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
If you are looking for some simple one click backup solution, Retrospect is your thing. Certainly, it sports some wizards that lead you through the process of invoking solid, time scheduled, backups. But if you are willing to dig in the extensive manual, and spend some time and effort to get to know your way in Retrospect, this may be very rewarding. The program proved to be rock solid. The amount of options is large. I like the possibility to reach back in time to grab this erroneous overwritten or deleted file. The program has no problems with open files. One can build all kinds of schedules, backup sets and so called selectors, save them, edit them later on, and knit everything together until it suits any need you can possibly have. Personally I use a combination of daily backups to an external HD and every week the most valuable data is written on DVD's to store in a safe place. Very good value for the money.
emc retrospect 7.5 December 8, 2007 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Great product at a great price. Alot less than Acronis products. If you have more than 3 machines to back up consider Microsoft Home Server software with HP hardware.
Retrospect Professional 7.5 works with Vista November 10, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I've used Retrospect on and off for 10 years. I've been using 7 and 7.5 for about 4 months. 7.5 now supports Windows Vista and I'm using it to back-up 2 PCs to a SimpleTech SimpleShare NAS 500 Office Storage Server on my home network. I already had to use it to recover an entire hard drive that crashed and it worked. I did have to recreate the index when restoring since by default it was stored on the crashed hard drive. Now that I have re-installed, I am forcing the index to be stored on my back-up server instead. This really ought to be the default, but I suppose it wouldn't work right on a tape drive. What's wrong with this software is the poor documentation, poor avenues for help, and the frankly quite awful EMC website. None are really designed to help home users. If you can get past that, the software is quite excellent. A serious tip: when you see errors that files aren't backed-up, you likely have bad sectors on your hard drive - regardless of the reason or error code stated in the log file. I never found any clue of this in the help system or by searching EMC's site or the web. Often the error codes given by Retrospect are too vague to be helpful. So vague that you don't know if the error is because of the source drive (reading) or the destination drive (writing) of a file. By downloading and running a low-level hard drive utility (SeaTools from Seagate for Seagate and Maxtor drives) you can find out if it is your hard drive for sure. I have found Windows checkdisk and scandisk to be unable to detect real problems. Seagate has excellent free phone support as well. I found out that hard drives in both my PCs were failing even though Windows utilities had no clue. Since replacing both drives I have not had any problems or errors reported by Retrospect. Why doesn't Retrospect suggest that impending hard drive failure might be the cause of back-up errors? I haven't a clue, but now you know too.
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