We found the five products/applications the best free backup software for both personal and home users, without too much learning they can easily operate the software and make a dependable backup of files, folders, OS, or even hard drives to any desired location. In case of any unexpected data loss or system corruption issue happens, an existing backup image can save the day!

In fact, Microsoft Windows 10 has File History to backup your device and files for free. But Is Windows 10 backup any good? As is known, File History is an automated file backup system on Windows 8/8.1 and Windows 10. With this built-in tool, you can do more than just restore previous versions of files; It's a competent backup tool for your needs.


Download Easeus Todo Backup Free 11.5


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EaseUS Todo Backup is the product of EaseUS, a software company headquartered in China. It was founded in 2004 by an entrepreneur named Ji'en Liu. The company serves millions of customers worldwide, with many software products including data backup, video editing, location tracking, text editing, and file transfer.

Business users can purchase a package to guarantee technical support for a year ($999), 2 years ($1399), or a lifetime ($2499), which is steep. They can also pay extra fees to get access to a centralized backup management system.

Todo lets you secure backup files with passwords to prevent unauthorized access. This way, even if someone gains access to your account, they can't get to your backup files and leak them without knowing the specific passwords.

During every backup process, Todo will send email notifications to inform you of the state of the backup mission. You can choose to receive such notifications when the backup is successful or if it fails in transit.

One of the great things about ToDo Backup is that it offers both file/folder backup and drive/partition imaging. The former is simply copying files and storing them in a container file (*.pbd), while the latter copies all the information on a disk or partition, for wholesale restores and recovery of your system.

Both the Free and Home version ($39.95 annual or $59.95 perpetual) offer all those basic features. The Home version, which I tested, goes even further with disk/partition/system cloning, Outlook email backup, Security Zone (think restore OS partition), restore to different hardware and PCs, and for another $20 ($59.95 annually), 1TB of online storage.

ToDo Backup makes it easy to select what you want to back up, and provides easy options (shown below) for the most common backup operations: your Outlook email and your operating system. The latter is simply imaging the entirety of the disk that you boot your operating system from. If you use other email programs, use the file and folder backup for your email.

You can also back up your system with the more versatile disk backup, but the OS option simplifies a not necessarily intuitive process that includes several partitions and might fool less experienced users.

I'm hoping someone can offer some assistance - I'm trying to restore a PBD backup file (containing a full OS and system backup - made using EaseUS Todo Backup) to a blank/new VirtualBox VM, and can't seem to get anywhere. The PBD file was originally on an external USB drive, and while I could get the blank/new VM to see the external USB drive via enabling USB in the VM settings, it then wouldn't see the WinPE ISO file I'd attached to the VM in order to be able to do something with the PBD file.

Although next time if I don't grab the entire disk to backup but just partitions, I might be able to use a non-free version of EaseUS Todo Backup to convert the PBD partition backup to a VMDK or VHD file (see above)

I have bee n using EaseUS ToDo backup trial version for backing up my system for about more than 3 years. So far it has worked well. But recently i downloaded their version 8.3 that is latest version of this time. But when i launch the software, it is completely frozen. Not moving forward. Only splash screen is there and a spinning slide that is showing that program is loading. But when i see task manager or disk indicator for activity, there is no activity.

Before using system transfer, it is essential to have the following prepared: 


1. A valid system image file created with System backup or Disk/partition backup option.


If you have not yet made your system backup, please refer to the screen shot below to create a system backup on your source computer. You can click HERE to get a more detailed instruction.


Note: 

System backup needs to be stored on an external hard drive, so that it can be easily transferred to your target computer. It can be on the same drive with your WinPE bootable disk. If you want to transfer the entire hard drive including the other partitions such as recovery partitions, please navigate to Disk/Partition backup, and select the entire disk. 


2. A proper WinPE bootable disk/USB which can be loaded on target machine.


If you have not yet created the bootable media, the screen shot below shows you where to find this option in the product. You can click HERE to get a more detailed instruction. 


Steps for System Transfer


1. Connect both the WinPE bootable media and the external drive that contains your system backup image file to the computer you want to transfer to, and set to boot from the WinPE bootable media. 


2. After the bootable media is properly loaded, please select System Transfer option in Tools


3. Choose the system backup file from the backup source folder. Cloud is not supported in WinPE environment.


4. Locate the system backup image file in the prompted window, then click OK. 


5. Select the target drive that you want to recover the system backup to, and click Next to initiate the process. 


6. After the restoration is properly completed, you can reboot your computer, disconnect the WinPE bootable media, and boot from the target drive.

Create System Backup


Create Bootable Media


Steps for System Transfer

1. Connect both the WinPE bootable media and the external drive that contains your system backup image file to the computer you want to transfer to, and set to boot from the WinPE bootable media.

2. After the bootable media is properly loaded, please select System Transfer option.

 

3. Locate the system backup image file in the prompted window.

 

4. Select the target drive that you want to recover the system backup to, and click Next to initiate the process.

 

5. After the restoration is properly completed, you can reboot your computer, disconnect the WinPE bootable media, and set to boot from the target drive.

Firstly, for a given backup, into schedule options, "Appoint daily first backup as Full" (or it can be "Differential"). I don't understand what this is about or what it means to tick it or not tick it. This option appears active (not greyed-out), whether you are doing one daily backup per day or multiple incrementals (for example, every 10 minutes). What does it mean if you untick it? What does it mean if you tick it?

Secondly, under Image Reserve Strategy, the option "Don't delete the first image". Again, say you're doing a daily incremental plan, but actually doing an incremental every 10 minutes, and you've set it to only preserve 5 backups maximum, does this mean that, with this ticked, the very first image/snapshot that you create just after midnight will be preserved for the whole of the next 24 hours? Whereas unticked means that in fact your oldest snapshot will be one of how the files were 50 minutes previously?

Generally, with an incremental backup plan of the kind described in the last para, I just don't really get how the full backup/incremental backup business works. At the moment there seem always to be two full backups in that folder, but that may be to do with the fact that I keep editing the plan... it appears that a full backup is then done after you have edited a plan. Possibly the last full backup is being "mutated" by merging with later incrementals ... but from the time stamp ("last modified"), actually this doesn't appear so.

For example, if you don't click "Don't delete the first image" it is in fact possible that all files involved in your entire backup plan become completely invalid! I could scarcely believe that the Ease US designers would allow such an outcome, so had to double-check with the engineer about this, but it is certainly the case: i.e. your first (full) image gets deleted, leaving only differentials/incrementals, which are rendered useless after the deletion of the first image, as per the Reserve Strategy you have defined (automatic deletion of old images).

"It is not 100% guaranteed that disaster will happen, because users can create many full backup images.If they have many full backup images, then there is no need to keep the first backup image.For example, they may create a full backup image every week.A few weeks later, there are multiple full backup images, then there is no need to keep the first one."

Regarding the other option, "Appoint daily first backup as Full/Differential". The explanation for this is that is essentially a way to "override" your "incremental" setting... but only for the first backup action of the day. So you've set things to "incremental"... every 10 minutes. A new day then starts (midnight or whenever), and instead of an incremental image being created referencing the previous day's backups, a new full backup image is created (or differential if you set it that way... which would be quite obscure).

This, it seems to me, is useful for something like a monthly plan: I would feel quite nervous/dubious about relying on incrementals/differentials referencing an image from months and months ago. For most purposes it should hopefully be possible to find time (middle of the night or whenever) to do a full backup once a month. This option enables this sort of plan to be automated. 006ab0faaa

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