It's not about OS, it's everything else I worry about
Amen! This is exactly why I have a different backup plan for my data than I do for the OS drive. Losing the OS drive is pretty much a non-event for me. I have syspreped Windows images that will reinstall Windows along with my most used apps all pre-installed already. I can install that completely unattended so I can have the OS drive recovered in about 15 minutes.
As noted previously, the only part of this that is a pain is apps that don't allow you to manage their license. I then need to go to the app maker and beg to reset my license. In this instance I simply restored a backup from a few days earlier (May 5th) and then deactivated those programs before reinstalling from scratch. Why did I reinstall from scratch when I had a good backup that was just a few days old? I like to do a clean install every now and then anyway, so I saw this as an opportunity to do so to reorganize a few things that I wanted to alter anyway.
But this also caused me to rethink my backup strategy.
My previous backups were like this:
Full backups on the 1st of every month.
Differentia backup every Sunday.
Incremental backups every day except Sundays and the 1st of the month.
All backups are retained for 6 months.
The problem with this is that it is one month between full backups so if either a full or differential backup gets corrupted, I could potentially lose as much as a month of backups. So, I have now revised my backups like this:
Full backups every Sunday.
Differential backup every day except Sundays.
With this scheme, the most time I can lose with any one corrupted backup is one week.
In this event I had one bad incremental backup. What's interesting is that my backups get placed on 3 separate drives at the time that they are created and every backup includes a verification. So, whatever corrupted my incremental backup took out all 3 copies.
Note that it is not Macrium Reflect that places the backup on multiple drives. I use StableBit Drive Pool which can automatically write any data written to a specific folder to as many different drives as I want so long as they are in the same drive pool.
I guess I'm going to have to suggest to Macrium to add a feature that allows a backup to be saved to multiple distinct locations. The good old Veritas System Recovery (previously Norton Ghost) has that capability so I'm considering switching to it at least on a temporary basis.
My Computers
-
At a glance
Win11 Pro 25H2 (RTM+)Intel i7-14650HX32 GBNo GPU - Built-in Intel Graphics- OS
- Win11 Pro 25H2 (RTM+)
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Acemagic
- CPU
- Intel i7-14650HX
- Memory
- 32 GB
- Graphics Card(s)
- No GPU - Built-in Intel Graphics
- Sound Card
- Integrated
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Varies as machine will often be moved to locations with different monitors
- Screen Resolution
- Varies
- Hard Drives
- 1 x 1TB Gen 4 NVMe SSD
- PSU
- 120W Power Brick
- Keyboard
- Corsair K70 Max RGB Magnetic Keyboard
- Mouse
- Logitech MX Master 3
- Internet Speed
- 1Gb Up / 1 Gb Down
- Browser
- Edge
- Antivirus
- Windows Defender
-
At a glance
Win11 Pro 25H2 (RTM+)Intel i7-1255U16 GBIntel Iris Xe Graphics- Operating System
- Win11 Pro 25H2 (RTM+)
- Computer type
- Laptop
- Manufacturer/Model
- Lenovo ThinkBook 13x Gen 2
- CPU
- Intel i7-1255U
- Memory
- 16 GB
- Graphics card(s)
- Intel Iris Xe Graphics
- Sound Card
- Realtek® ALC3306-CG codec
- Monitor(s) Displays
- 13.3-inch IPS Display
- Screen Resolution
- WQXGA (2560 x 1600)
- Hard Drives
- 2 TB 4 x 4 NVMe SSD
- PSU
- USB-C / Thunderbolt 4 Power / Charging
- Keyboard
- Backlit, spill resistant keyboard
- Mouse
- Buttonless Glass Precision Touchpad
- Internet Speed
- 1Gb Up / 1Gb Down
- Browser
- Edge
- Antivirus
- Windows Defender
- Other Info
- WiFi 6e / Bluetooth 5.1 / Facial Recognition / Fingerprint Sensor / ToF (Time of Flight) Human Presence Sensor






