Tech Advisor

Acronis True Image 2021 Premium

Price: £87 (inc VAT) from fave.co/3lCDKu9

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Acronis True Image 2021 Premium is indisputab­ly the most comprehens­ive solution when it comes to backup and computer security for Windows PCs. In fact, we’re unaware of any other product that actually marries these two software discipline­s into a single streamline­d applicatio­n.

While anti-malware and backup might seem a slightly odd marriage at first, the ability to fire off a backup or shut off access to previous backups when malware is detected makes a whole lot of sense. An admitted sceptic when the company first started down this path, I’m now a big fan of the concept.

DESIGN

Acronis True Image sports a clean, attractive interface and is easy to use

– once you get used to it. There are some quirks in both organizati­on and operation, and the program occasional­ly assumes something is obvious when it’s not. If you’re new to it, take a good half hour and explore (hint: move the cursor over everything) before you commit to your first operations.

There’s a lot to talk about with True Image. I’ll get to the malware protection later as first and foremost, the program fulfils the promise of its name by creating image files from drives or partitions, as well as selected files and folders. These can be full (everything), incrementa­l (everything since the last backup), or differenti­al (everything since the initial backup). You can also back up files from your phone or files from remote shared network locations, and employ Blockchain to notarize backed-up files with the premium version.

True Image lets you schedule backups, will automatica­lly (or manually) cull older backups when space runs low, split backups, copy sector-by-sector or data-only, validate the backup post run, run commands pre- and post-operation, and a lot more. In short, just about every option invented by the backup community has been implemente­d.

The program also backs up to nearly any type of destinatio­n: optical, the 1TB of cloud storage provided by Acronis, hard drives, network locations, and more. It will optionally place a version of the program on removable media for use during restore operations. If you’re superold-school, sorry, tape is not supported.

Other related and tangential features include hardware-independen­t recovery media creation (USB/optical), disk cloning, a OEM-like recovery partition creator, a system clean-up tool (think CCLeaner), and a secure erase utility.

There were some irritation­s while defining

backups and doing other tasks. For instance, after clicking on the Add backup button, the initial creation process was so slow, I found myself clicking again unnecessar­ily. There should be instant feedback. Also, if I didn’t provide credential­s (user name and password) for a network destinatio­n, I couldn’t double-click on that location to re-enter them until exiting and re-entering the job creation.

I also wish that someday True Image would allow multiple destinatio­ns for each job. Most end users have one set of data, and they want to back it up to different locations for redundancy. These are all minor gripes that don’t affect the program’s outstandin­g overall utility.

There are three versions of True Image, the £87.49 premium version I tested with all the goodies, a £62.99 version that omits Blockchain and electronic signatures, and a £34.99 version that lacks cloud storage and related features such as cloud backup replicatio­n, and Office 365 backup.

PROTECTION

A few years ago Acronis recognized an opening in the market due to a spate of ransomware attacks, and added ransomware protection to True Image’s bag of tricks. It’s now expanded its capabiliti­es to protect against general malware, malicious websites, and other bad behaviour such as code injection into apps. This obviously requires realtime interventi­on – this year’s big add.

To test its anti-malware abilities I ran the tests provided by Acronis, as well as WICAR’s stuff (Acronis provided

links), and surfed some known bad areas of the web. True Image caught everything. As effective as it proved, real-time protection is optional and may be turned off.

Once upon a time, I might have rubbished ransomware protection. Then the NAS box hosting my personal website fell prey via a vulnerabil­ity in an out-of-date version of WorldPress. It wasn’t fun, though thankfully it didn’t affect the USB-attached backup drive. It did affect a synced Dropbox account, which is the only reason I spotted it.

Little was lost, but it was a disturbing affair. Being on a NAS box, it was not something True Image would’ve caught unless the box were mapped as a local drive (it wasn’t). But the point is – learn from my experience. Ransomware exists, and it’s nasty.

PERFORMANC­E

True Image is as quick as they come. Sporting a new 2.5GbE network, I very much enjoyed the speed of backing up to and from my NAS boxes. I also backed up local folders to hard drives, folders to optical (single BD-R/MDisc), and some files to the cloud. All proceeded quickly and without incident. I hate incidents and tend not to trust backup software that suffers them.

One area where I’d like to see a bit more speed is in the actual booting of the program. Some of the lag is no doubt due to communicat­ing with the Acronis servers. If you don’t want a program that hails the outside world, True Image is not for you. I’d also like to see a bit more flexibilit­y in the system tray applet, such as the ability to get rid of it.

As you can see opposite, True Image has a heavy system footprint and spawns a whopping 12 background processes. Regardless, I noticed little impact on system performanc­e. With a relatively new computer, you shouldn’t either. True Image enumerates network locations very quickly, something that seems to stymie many programs. It also automatica­lly remembers your login credential­s. Nice.

VERDICT

True Image offers an all-encompassi­ng tragedy-prevention solution for £87 per year. Given its broad capabiliti­es, that’s pretty sane pricing.

Of course, the scope of the program and the number of processes it keeps running are not for everyone. Best practices will suffice for many, though it’s hard to argue about safe. Jon L. Jacobi

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 ??  ?? True Image backs up data from just about any location.
True Image backs up data from just about any location.
 ??  ?? True Image sports options galore. If there’s a feature that’s been implemente­d in the backup space, you’ll find it here.
True Image sports options galore. If there’s a feature that’s been implemente­d in the backup space, you’ll find it here.
 ??  ?? Acronis True Image with all its features sets up a whopping 12 background processes. There’s little impact on performanc­e, but that’s a bundle.
Acronis True Image with all its features sets up a whopping 12 background processes. There’s little impact on performanc­e, but that’s a bundle.

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