The Commercial Appeal

It’s World Backup Day

Stuck at home? Take a few minutes to preserve your precious media.

- Jefferson Graham

Today is World Backup Day, a made-up holiday that encourages the sale of more products like hard drives and USB thumb drives. ❚ When’s the last time you actually backed up your phone? Or computer? All of those precious photos sitting on the phone and not backed up could end up as distant memories if you lost the device or had it stolen. ❚ And having your pictures posted on Facebook doesn’t count as a backup. The social network greatly lowers the resolution after you’ve uploaded it, making it unsuitable as a second copy. ❚ We’re all at home now. Why not take a few minutes this weekend to preserve our media? ❚ There are several options other than a hard drive. There are online tools: An Amazon Prime subscripti­on will back up your photos and add-on devices for the iphone that are much cheaper than a yearly icloud subscripti­on.

Figure out what needs backup. For most people, it’s photos and videos, followed by documents.

Most computers have specific folders with the appropriat­e categories: documents, music, movies, pictures and the like.

If your data falls outside of those areas, make note of where they are, so you can grab them and back them up.

Phone users will want to grab photos, texts and e-mails.

Apple offers two ways to back up phones.

You can either pay for icloud storage or connect the phone to your computer in Settings.

You’ll need room on your computer hard drive to complete this process.

Many Samsung Galaxy phones have slots for external storage, so the need to back up won’t be as great with them.

All you need is an accessory microsd card. Samsung offers its answer to Apple’s icloud, Samsung Cloud, with 200 GB for $2.99 monthly.

Online backup is the simplest method, as you won’t have to buy extra hardware.

You will need to remember to take the time to update your folders and upload them. Some of the companies have auto-backup solutions (Google’s Backup & Sync) but they could cause more pain and headache.

Since all the programs sell backup based on a finite amount of storage, if your auto-backup goes over the allotment, you’ll start getting nag messages to delete.

Pricing: Apple icloud offers 200 GB for $2.99 monthly or 2 TB for $9.99 monthly, Google One is $1.99 for 100 GB or $9.99 for 2 TBS. Dropbox is $9.99 for 2 TBS and Microsoft Onedrive offers 100 GB for $1.99 or 1 TB for $69.99 yearly.

For photos, look to Amazon and Google for economical online backup. If you’re a member of Amazon’s Prime program for expedited shipping and entertainm­ent, you have access to Amazon’s unlimited photo backup. Download the smartphone app, and set it to Auto Save, and Amazon automatica­lly uploads every image you take – but no videos. The nice thing about this service is that if you have a Fire TV streaming stick or Echo Show connected speaker, you can instruct the app to display specific collection­s of photos as a screensave­r.

Google offers the same service for the Nest Hub display units through Google Photos. The Google Photos website and app offer free backup for photos and videos, but with a catch. They are at slightly lower resolution. If you want full resolution, you’ll need to upgrade your Google One plan.

Qubii starts at $39.99 and clamps to your iphone charger to back up photos and videos in the background to a micro-sd memory card.

The card will cost extra, but you can pick up a 128 GB card for around $20, or $30 for a 256 GB card.

Apple iphones don’t come with expandable memory, like many Android’s, and the cost of buying the phone with more storage is substantia­l.

For instance, an iphone 11 with 64 GB of storage starts at $699, versus $749 with 128 GB or $849 with 256 GB, so the card is a way more economical option.

Sandisk’s ixpand is a portable flash drive that connects to the iphone’s Lightning charge slot, and has 128 GB of storage. It sells for just over $45.

A good, old-fashioned hard drive is a welcome addition to most of our desks.

It is the most economical, tends to work faster, but comes with a catch. Hard drives fail. At some point, there will be a crash.

Many like to back up to two drives simultaneo­usly, and with the price of drives these days, that’s not a bad thing.

I’ve had good luck with the orange Lacie “Rugged” line of portable drives over the years. You can pick up a 4 TB model for as low as $149, or spend $229 on a 1 TB SSD version.

The advantage for SSD is it’s solidstate, with no moving parts, and thus less prone to fail.

But compare buying two 4 TB models for $300, versus just over $100 yearly for 2 TB of backup space. The hard drive is the better deal.

The beauty of online is, however, that you can pick up the data from anywhere.

And if your house were to burn down, or some other calamity, the hard drive would go with it. Not so with the online backup.

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