PC Pro

O&O DiskImage 15 Profession­al

A versatile performer that can protect your entire Windows system, as well as individual files and folders

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SCORE

PRICE £30 (£36 inc VAT) from oo-software.com

Despite the name, O&O DiskImage is an all-round backup solution, capable of protecting nominated files and folders as well as entire hard disks. In fact, it’s somewhat agnostic as to what you want to protect: disk and file backup tasks are initially defined through separate dialogs, but after that, you can schedule, edit and update them in exactly the same way.

It’s an approach that encourages you to make regular backups of your entire system, which certainly isn’t a bad idea. Doing it this way ensures that nothing gets inadverten­tly missed out of your backup set, and finding and recovering files is a breeze because your backed-up disk image can be mounted and browsed directly within the Windows Explorer. Plus, of course, if you’re hit by a malware attack or an operating system failure, you can boot into the O&O recovery environmen­t – the program includes a wizard that will write it to a bootable USB flash drive or ISO file – and then roll your entire system back to an earlier state.

Inevitably, full-disk backups take up more storage space than selective ones, but they’re less weighty than you might imagine as a lot of the files in a Windows installati­on are highly compressib­le. In out tests, we tried backing up a Windows system disk containing 141GB of data and were impressed to see O&O DiskImage squeeze it into a 72GB image file. If you need to save even more space, you can configure filters to exclude superfluou­s files and folders – and once you’ve made that initial image, you can build incrementa­l backups onto it, which means that subsequent updates will be far smaller. All of this means a 2TB external drive should be able to accommodat­e a complete system archive dating back months or even years.

Speed isn’t too bad, either. Our initial full-disk image took a reasonable 21mins 40secs to back up to an external hard disk connected via USB 3, and while incrementa­l updates are no faster, we’d say the process is quick and painless enough to run as regularly as you like – the software allows you to trigger jobs at a set time every day or whenever the computer starts up. We’re particular fans of the option to automatica­lly run a backup task whenever the target USB device is plugged in: this means you can store your drive somewhere safely away from the computer and only hook it up from time to time to freshen your backups.

However, this leads us to the biggest shortcomin­g of the full-disk approach: it’s not ideal for remote backup. Replicatin­g our disk image to a NAS inside our home network took around six times as long as over USB 3, and if you want to upload your images over the internet you can expect a very long wait. On domestic broadband with a 10Mbits/sec upstream connection, a 72GB file will take a gigantic 17 hours to upload – and that’s the best-case scenario. Download speeds are normally faster, but you’re still looking at an agonising delay if you need to get a borked computer up and running. Things will only get worse if you also have to download a lengthy chain of incrementa­l updates.

It probably makes sense, therefore, to create a second, smaller backup set to protect your most important files. As we’ve mentioned, O&O DiskImage happily supports backups of specific folders and file types: it’s a little irritating (and baffling) that the exclusion filter isn’t available here, but

“Recovering files is a breeze because your backed-up disk image can be mounted and browsed within the Windows Explorer”

you can optionally apply compressio­n and encryption to keep your data compact and secure.

It’s also worth making clear that the software itself has little in the way of cloud support. It can connect directly to an FTP server, but to access other remote resources you’ll need to map a Windows drive or use a separate sync service. Still, whatever approach you decide to take, the O&O DiskImage client won’t slow you down: it proved to be one of this month’s fastest packages for data replicatio­n, whizzing our 2GB test folder onto an external drive in just 22 seconds and transferri­ng it to our NAS appliance in 1min 43secs.

We’ve just a few more gripes, though. For one, it’s not very easy to browse your backup history. If you want to skim back through previous versions of a file, you need to use the Restore dialog to open and inspect each of your old archives in turn. The software also won’t cull old backups when your destinatio­n drive runs out of space, and it’s not quite sophistica­ted enough to create automatic schedules of incrementa­l, differenti­al and full backups – something other packages manage.

Neverthele­ss, O&O DiskImage 15 Profession­al is a powerful backup solution with an emphasis on protecting your entire system, rather than just a selection of files. That’s an appealing pitch, and £36 isn’t a lot of money to ask for such all-round assurance.

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 ??  ?? ABOVE O&O’s focus on full backups means nothing should slip between the cracks
ABOVE O&O’s focus on full backups means nothing should slip between the cracks

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