Prism's colonoscopy metaphor is spot on! I've had two already and am up for renewal next year. But that's probably more than you needed to know ....
Can't guess how many times I have reformatted hard drives, moved and re-sized partitions, set up multi-OS boots etc. Back in the Win 3.0 through Win 98 days, I would annually back up all of my data, reformat and reload the OS and apps as a matter of routine, whether I needed to or not .... because of course I needed to. I rushed madly to get it done during my kids' Christmas vacations, when they didn't require the computers for school.
XP was much better. Once it had settled down in service pack 2, I found reformat / reload unnecessary until one kid or another would inevitably snag from the Web some deep-tentacled, viral Trojan.
These days, it's cheap to buy a second disk to hold app data and all of those precious old photographs. At the very least, it's worth putting data in a partition separate from Windows and applications.
I grabbed the Tomato USB firmware (from
http://tomatousb.org/) and burned it into an ASUS RT-N16 router. This Linux-based gadget not only handles my wired & wireless Internet access and supports my VOIP telephone gadget, but also supports two terabyte drives down in the basement as network-attached storage (NAS).
Backup apps on my networked PCs "push" filesystem changes to the NAS volumes. I back up WIN XP-Pro 64, Win 7 Starter Edition, Win 7-Pro 64 and Ubuntu 12.04 machines in this way. (Pleased to say that I skipped Vista.)
This totally saved my bacon last summer, when I lost a drive on my development PC.
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
If that weren't enough, I've configured the NAS drives to spin down after 15 minutes of inactivity. In my cool, dehumidified basement, those drives should last for many years.
Off topic but on my mind: I sure hope that my CoffeeCup stuff works with Windows 8. I am not looking forward to
that transition.
Nor do I look forward to Microsoft's dropping XP support next spring.
These are the root canals and colonoscopies of life with computers.
halfnium -AT- alum.mit.edu
Yes, I looked just like that in 1962.