On Tue, 2015-09-08 at 13:28 -0400, John Lauterbach wrote: > Not all of us are on servers.
Not clear whether you're referring to the mail system or the backup system, If it's the former, then of course we are all on servers but not all of them are IMAP, however my point was specifically in relation to a question about backing up IMAP accounts. If you mean that not everyone has a backup server, that's true but irrelevant. If I was backing up to a local disk my backup technique would be exactly the same. > Also, my laptop (where mail evo with my business > -related e-mail) is on 24/7 except when going through airport > security, etc. > The same for my two desktops. I cannot afford to loose what I have > on the evo > on my laptop. Yes, one of my business e-mail accounts is IMPAX, but > the ISP's > server does not store sent e-mail. Incremental backups are a thing > of the past > with large capacity 2.5 inch SSDs. The idea that "disks are so large now that we can stop worrying about running out of space" is one I've been hearing for the past 40 years. Oddly enough, the size of email messages seems to grow as fast as the space available for their storage, but even if that weren't true, you mean you copy 6GB of (mostly redundant) data over your network connection every time you do a backup? I don't see the point. > The partition where I keep by evo backups > (about 6 GB each still has more than 60 GB free space). They are > also backed up on SpiderOak. I do not see the objection to doing > what works. So you can store up to 10 backups. Using an incremental scheme would get you a lot more, and you'd use much less bandwidth in doing it. You must do whatever works for you, but the discussion is about what if anything Evo itself should support. My view is that it would be a waste of scarce developer time to code some application-specific backup scheme when it's not needed. poc _______________________________________________ evolution-list mailing list evolution-list@gnome.org To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ... https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list