I love the idea of being able to carry my computer around me me.  Thanks.

-----Original Message-----
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Paul Erkens
Sent: Wednesday, September 14, 2011 1:15 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Questionabout Super Doopper and external drives

Hi Bill Holton,
If your brother has an intel mac then yes. You can take your usb drive to
his place and work on it there. Back home, you can smart update from your
usb disk back to your hard drive. To make this work, before going to your
brother's, make a smart update backup from your own macintosh hd to the usb
drive. Work at your brother's, and once home, immediately put everything
back. Otherwise, you are going to loose stuff.
Hth,
Paul.
On Sep 14, 2011, at 6:30 PM, Bill Holton wrote:

> Hi.
> Looks like VM Fusion will now allow you to run Lion in a VM Window, which
I
> would imagine would work just as well as the sandbox.  
> But I do have a question.  If I were to take my external drive to my
> brother's house could I use the bootable backup to basically run my own
> computer on his machine and then resynch the files when I get home/
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
> [mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Paul Erkens
> Sent: Wednesday, September 14, 2011 9:04 AM
> To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
> Subject: Re: Questionabout Super Doopper and external drives
> 
> Hi Bill, James and others,
> 
> Super duper is equal in its functionality as far as backing up and
bootable
> backups go. CCC is free. Super duper costs 30 dollars or so. Super duper
has
> an extra bit of functionality though, that I really love, now that I
messed
> up my system installing the wrong drivers and so on in the past. Super
duper
> allows you to create a sand box. A sand box is an entire copy of your mac
os
> 10 system installation residing on another partition of your hard drive,
> that you can use to play around with software updates, system drivers you
> install such as mac fuse and others, and you can mess with applications,
> before you go ahead and actually install them for real into your main
> macintosh hd. If you want to test a new hardware device driver, and you
are
> not sure of the outcome, whether or not it is going to disturb you or
> something in your system, you can install the new driver inside the
sandbox.
> if you find out that everything works just fine inside your second os, the
> sandbox, then you can safely install the new drivers into your real
system.
> What super duper does, is that it requires you to repartition your drive
> into 2 pieces. One for your normal system, and a 20 gb partition for the
> sandbox.
> But then, Once that is done, you have the great advantage of testing new
> drivers and software inside your sandbox, before taking the plunge to
> install them into the daily operating system. If, on the other hand, you
> find that the driver is not working for you, is too intrucive or what ever
> reason you may have to discard it, then all you need to do is copy your
> clean macintosh hd system files over to the sandbox, replacing the mess
you
> created there. Now, you also got rid of the faulty driver in the sandbox.
> No matter if you boot from your macintosh hd or from the sandbox
partition,
> you always have your documents etc at hand. This is because if you boot
from
> macintosh hd, then the documents are accessible as usual. But from the
> sandbox, they are reference using symbolic links, so that, even though the
> sandbox is just a copy of the real os, you can access all your private
stuff
> from there too. That is wonderful in super duper. You should very
carefully
> read the manual though, before you begin sandboxing, so that you are aware
> of what's happening. For example, you should never copy the sandbox back
to
> macintosh hd. That makes you loose all your private stuff.
> 
> CCC can backup and make the backup bootable, so if you don't need the sand
> box functionality, then ccc is perfect too.
> 
> On Sep 13, 2011, at 6:31 PM, Bill Holton wrote:
> 
>> Hi.
>> I have a 2 tarabyte drive on its way, and I have a few questions about
Mac
>> backups.
>> First, as I seem to recall, with Superdooper you can create a backup in a
>> format you can actually boot from, if the system becomes trashed?  Is
this
>> correct?  Is SuperDooper the only package that allows this,or does time
>> Machine, also?
>> Second question:  How would I configure the drive so I can use it to back
> up
>> my Mac, but also swap it out to my PC to back it up?  Guessing I'll need
> to
>> create two partitions?  If so, how do I create the correct two using
> Tiger?
>> Thanks.
>> Bill
>> 
>> 
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