BetaONE will rise again!


Reply
  #1  
Old 15th Aug 06, 01:10 PM
Alpine's Avatar
Alpine Alpine is offline
Retired Crew
 
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Run Forest, RUN!!
Posts: 3,601
Alpine is on a distinguished road
Send a message via ICQ to Alpine Send a message via AIM to Alpine
M$ Vista undelete sparks more facts
Can a leotard change its spots?

OUR RECENT examination of the 'undelete' technology in Windows Vista has become more important since Apple formally announced 'Time Machine' in Leopard, the next iteration of OSX.


Unfortunately Apple's Time Machine requires a separate disk, dedicated to the backing-up of data on your primary drive. Useful in the case of a hard-disk failure, but not exactly the cheapest option. It also seems to have an esoteric GUI, which may or may not work well in real-word usage. Windows Vista's alternative backup application is very similar, albeit without the over-the-top interface, and also comes with a Shadow Copy feature that's integrated into the normal file/folder menus, and has some interesting attributes of its own.

The Inquirer recently spoke to Dan Stevenson, Lead Program Manager from Microsoft's 'Windows Storage and File Systems Team', who is currently working on applications related to backup and data-restoration on Windows Vista.

Dan stated that the Shadow Copy feature in Vista doesn't create a completely new file every time a change is made, it only creates a backup of changes using a driver that tracks changes at the block level across the entire disk volume using a copy-on-write mechanism. These changes are captured in discrete shadow copies or 'snapshots', which are created more or less once a day. The total size taken up by the shadow copies is capped at 15% of the disk size - this will normally give you a month or so worth of shadow copies, depending on your I/O profile.

Shadow copies are tied in with the more standard backup application that is included with Vista. Within the user interface for the restoration of previous versions, manual or scheduled full-backup entries will be listed, allowing for a comprehensive unified interface for all your Vista data retrieval needs.

The Vista backup application proper, is a more standard block-level backup/restore program for complete disaster recovery. It performs incremental/differential backups to a hard disk, similar to Leopard's Time Machine, so that it only backs up the changed blocks - but each backup is functionally a complete full backup. As a bonus, the format is VHD, which lets you mount (but not boot) the backup images in VPC/VS. All of this is integrated into a standard Windows control panel entry, and the Windows Recovery Environment, which now includes the System Restore feature (...which also incorporates the new Shadow Copy/backup tech). For further information, the team's bog can be read here.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Microsoft: Push the Windows Vista date back NewsBot NeoWin News 0 4th Aug 06 07:00 PM
Vista to have inbuilt undelete NewsBot NeoWin News 0 30th Jul 06 02:00 AM
Microsoft Plans Six Core Windows Vista Versions Alpine BetaONE News 0 20th Feb 06 09:37 PM
Microsoft Plans Six Core Windows Vista Versions NewsBot ieXbeta News 0 20th Feb 06 04:00 AM
Vista graphics drivers to be more stable than XP drivers, ATI says Alpine BetaONE News 0 24th Sep 05 04:38 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:04 AM.


Design by Vjacheslav Trushkin for phpBBStyles.com.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.5
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.