You can back up content, data, and settings from your phone to your Google Account. You can restore your backed up information to the original phone or to some other Android phones. You can't use back up when you set up a personal device with a work profile or for work only, or when you set up a company-owned device.

Time Machine automatically makes hourly backups for the past 24 hours, daily backups for the past month, and weekly backups for all previous months. The oldest backups are deleted when your backup disk is full.


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The first backup might take longer than you expect, but you can continue using your Mac while a backup is underway. Time Machine backs up only the files that changed since the previous backup, so future backups will be faster.

Your Windows PC comes with a one-stop backup solution, Windows Backup, that will help you to back up many of the things that are most important to you. From your files, themes, and some settings to many of your installed apps and Wi-Fi information - Windows Backup will help protect what matters and make it easier than ever to move to a brand-new PC.

Windows Backup is an easy, single stop for all of your backup needs. Your free Microsoft account comes with 5 GB of OneDrive cloud storage (and more storage is available if you need it), and backing up your folders syncs the folders you specify to your OneDrive account, making them instantly accessible on all computers that you use with this Microsoft account. And since they are synced to OneDrive, once you sign in to OneDrive on a new PC, those files will be available to you once again.

If you want to check and make sure everything is still backed up (hey, we all want that sense of security from time to time!), you can just open the Windows Backup app and it will show you the current state of your backup, or you can check on things at the top of the Windows backup page in Settings, at StartĀ  > SettingsĀ  > AccountsĀ  > Windows backup.

We have your back! When you get a new PC or if you have to reinstall Windows, when you are setting it up, just log in with the same Microsoft account that you used to make the backup here. We'll see that you have backups and ask you if you would like to restore one.

If you have more than one computer backed up, you can select More options and select the backup you wish to restore from. When you get to your desktop everything will be right there waiting for you!

Once you've turned off backup, if you wish to delete the data that has been backed up previously to your Microsoft account, you can visit your Microsoft Account Devices page , find the Cloud synced settings section at the bottom of the page and select and select Clear stored settings.

If you want to check and make sure everything is still backed up (hey, we all want that sense of security from time to time!), you can just open the Windows Backup app and it will show you the current state of your backup, or you can check on the state of your OneDrive folder sync at the top of the main Settings page; just open StartĀ  > SettingsĀ  and look for the icon.

We have your back! When you get a new Windows 11 PC, when you are setting it up, just log in with the same Microsoft account that you used to make the backup here. We'll see that you have backups and ask you if you would like to restore one.

If you have more than one computer backed up, you can select More options and select the backup you wish to restore from. When you get to your desktop everything you have backed up will be right there waiting for you!

If you have to reinstall Windows on your Windows 10 PC, you'll still have your folders synced to OneDrive and your settings synced to your Microsoft account, so as long as you log in with the same account you used to make the backup, everything will restore and you'll still have your files and settings with you.

If you want to stop backing up some of your folders, you'll need to turn those off in OneDrive. To do that, right-click (or long-press) the OneDrive icon in your system tray, then select Settings > Sync and backup > Manage backup, and turn off the folders you no longer wish to back up.

Going by our initial research and criteria, for each round of testing we settle on external desktop hard drives and portable models to evaluate. We first test them using the benchmarking program HD Tune. For a more real-world measurement, we then time the transfer of a 15 GB folder including a Blu-ray movie and a 31 GB folder of music. We perform each test six times, and we determine the average read and write speeds to rule out performance hiccups.

The Seagate Expansion drive performed fine in our large-file transfer tests but had the slowest speeds of any desktop drive we tested in our small-file transfer tests. It also disconnected itself from our PC without warning in the midst of testing and failed to connect again afterward.

The Toshiba Canvio Flex was a pick in a previous version of this guide. The Canvio Flex and Canvio Advance Plus come with USB-A and USB-C cables, but both drives still have a Micro-B connector on the body. The more durable USB-C port and the higher capacity of our new pick, the Western Digital My Passport Ultra, make it a more attractive option.

I'm new to Dropbox. I own three computers--a Home PC, Office PC, and laptop. I got Dropbox to achieve two main goals--1) to have backup security against data loss and (2) be able to access and work with data from any of my computers in an an efficient, organized way from any workstation.

First, on my Home PC, I use solid state C: drive for operating system & programs and drive for data. I think my PC puts Desktop, Documents, and Downloads on C: although I don't create much data outside drive. My question is whether Dropbox can Sync or Backup from Desktop, Documents, and Downloads on C: AND my data on D:? I don't want to go down this road and find a dead end.

Second, assuming that my question above does not lead to a dead end, then how might I best achieve my two goals? Is Sync or Backup better for this? Should I turn on sync on all three computers? Will that result in the My Dropbox Home Page listing the three computer names/identifiers--so that I can click on one name to get into the attached files? In advance, Sync would seem more straightforward and intuitive, but I worry that a mistaken deletion on DB or PC will just sync by deleting in the other location. I guess I'm wanting my files to live in two places--local and cloud--in a way that helps keep data safe and allows access from multiple locations.

I believe I'm trying to do the same thing you described in your original post: backup folders that are primarily on my D drive, and a few on my C drive. I only see options in the Dropbox Desktop App to backup a handful of common folders on my C drive (e.g., Desktop, Documents, Downloads, etc.). Did you figure out how to add other folders to your backup that aren't available in the checklist? Were you able to add folders from your D drive as well?

That's super helpful to know. Thanks for confirming. As I don't want to move things around unnecessarily, and all of my important data is on my (internal) D drive, I've opted to subscribe to Carbonite, which handles my use case nicely.

I find that to be very helpful. I appreciate your confirmation. Due to the fact that my important data resides on my (internal) D drive, and I don't want to move things unnecessarily, I have decided to subscribe to Carbonite.

However, I think I have found a solution as my actions removed the rogue backup folder a couple of days ago and it hasn't returned yet. If the OP (ThisGuyRightHere) still needs an answer (or anyone else for that matter), I will post my solution on here for him

On the computer's main hard drive, Norton will have created a folder called 'N360 Backup'; unless you have actually done a back up, this folder will be empty. This folder needs to be deleted; however, it is adminstrator protected. So first of all, right click on the folder, click 'Properties' and then the tab, 'Sharing' and go through the relatively simple process of sharing the folder. After you have done that, the folder can be deleted in the normal way. You will also need to do the same for any external drives that were connected to the computer at the time Norton Backup was originally set up (or other drives in your computer as some more expensive models have more than one drive). Delete all these 'N360 Backup' folders in the same way (ie sharing first). The 'Norton Back Up' drive in 'Devices and Drives' that appears in the image in the original post to this thread, then automatically disappears.

As far as I can recall, when I installed Norton 360 onto my new computer, it carried over the files I had backed up from my old computer. I didn't want them though. I can't remember if I deleted the files before I installed Norton onto my new computer, or after (but I believe I did it after) and I still couldn't get rid of the Norton Drive even though it was empty. (I had not run a scan yet.) I turned the Backup off so that it wouldn't back up anything else, so, yeah, it was off. I still couldn't delete the Norton Backup Drive. After I turned it on and ran the scan again (pausing it because I thought I was wasting my time) I went back into the drive, deleted the files it had scanned, unmarked all the folders/files that it was supposed to scan, and then, when I right clicked on the drive again just to see if that did anything, I was able to delete it. (I do not know if I turned off Norton Backup before my final attempt to delete it, but I probably did so that it wouldn't attempt to scan anything in the future.) ff782bc1db

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