

Reviewed by Barry Little -
March 15, 2007
Publisher:
Acronis, Inc.
Price:
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Viruses. Malware. Rootkits.
Poorly-written drivers, “critical updates” and
patches that sometimes do more harm than good.
Months of excess baggage left behind in the registry
from installing and uninstalling dozens of programs
and drivers, and corrupted registry keys from all
those wonderful blue-screen crashes that finally
forces Windows to collapse under its own dead
weight. This is the hi-tech minefield your PC
navigates on a daily basis, putting the hours you
invested in tuning and tweaking it to perfection,
and all of your valuable data, at risk.
Fortunately, there’s Acronis True Image 10.0 Home
to help keep your data out of harm’s way.
Whether it’s important financial
information, a music or photo collection or a Level
50 Dark Elf you’ve spent a good part of the
year developing through thousands of hours of quests
and treasure-hunting through ancient ruins and
dungeons, you probably don’t have to be told how
important it is to perform backups on a regular
basis. The only way to insure that backups are done
on a regular basis is if the software is easy enough
to use, and is as hands-off as possible while doing
its job.
True Image 10.0 Home—Your One Stop
Backup Solution
Some backup programs perform
traditional file-by-file backups. Others perform
sector-by-sector image based “disaster recovery” or
“bare metal” backups. There are even a few that do
both. But you’d be hard-pressed to find one that
does so as easily with the power and flexibility of
True Image.
Acronis True Image 10.0 Home
does more than just file-by-file and image backups
using the usual full, incremental and differential
backup schemes. True Image can clone and
prepare new hard drives for installation, recover
your system and allow you to log into it
immediately, and work on it while the recovery
process continues in the background—and more. In
addition to maintaining the same powerful but
easy-to-use features that has made it such a success
over the years, this newest edition has some
exciting new features in its repertoire of tools and
tricks.

About Acronis
Acronis offers storage management
solutions that are technically advanced for
mission-critical applications but easy to use. The
company provides disaster recovery, backup and
restore, partitioning, boot management, privacy,
data migration, and other storage management
products for enterprises, corporations and consumers
of any qualification. Acronis has offices in the
United States, Europe and Asia and sells its
products through retail outlets, resellers and on
the Web.
Backup Methodologies—Strengths and
Weaknesses
With traditional file-by-file
backups, each file and folder is backed up
sequentially to removable or non-removable storage,
making it easy to choose whether to backup up the
entire hard drive or just a few files and folders
regularly. File-by-file may excel when it comes to
restoring individual folders and/or files, but when
it comes to a “bare metal” restore after a
catastrophic system or hard drive failure, that’s
when its weaknesses become apparent. To get your
system functioning again, you have to
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Reinstall
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Reinstall your
backup software |
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Retrieve your
latest backup set |
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Hope that your
backup software can restore critical system files
and registry keys that Windows has locked open
without incident—otherwise you’re looking at a
time-consuming re-installation of everything
from scratch, and then using your backup software to
recover your data. |
Finally, a file-by-file restorations,
especially in a disaster-recovery situation, is just
plain slow.
Checkpoint
backups can automatically take “point-in-time
snapshots” of your PC’s system state, data files, or
both at preset intervals or when a change has
occurred (like a program being installed or
removed). System Restore, Shadow Copy (now
known as Previous Version), and
Symantec’s GoBack, fall into this category. This
method has its drawbacks as well:
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Older checkpoints are
overwritten by newer ones at regular intervals,
making them less than ideal for long-term data
archiving. |
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The files may be stored on a hidden or special
partition which makes them inaccessible to the user for off-loading to
another storage medium to recover and use later for disaster recovery. Even if you could, most checkpoint
programs won’t allow it anyway. |
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The hidden or special
partition is usually on the same drive being
protected. Lose the drive, and you lose the
checkpoint files. |
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Some third-party
checkpoint software requires special device drivers
that are not compatible with every version of
Windows—or could cause conflicts with other disk
utilities. |
Imaging
makes a sector-by-sector snapshot and backup of the
entire hard disk in its current state. Imaging is
invaluable for doing a “bare metal” restore after
replacing a failed hard drive, or recovering from a
Windows installation that can not be repaired. You
don’t have to reinstall the OS, your programs, or
your precious data. With your most recent image
backup, you can restore you system in half the time
it would take using either of the previous methods.
Of course, if you want to recover a single or just a
few files, until recently you were out of luck with
Imaging’s “all-or-nothing” method of data recovery.
As you can see, if you wanted a
complete and flexible “best-of-all-worlds” backup
solution, you had to go through the hassle and
expensive of investing in and using multiple backup
programs. Fortunately, Acronis solved that problem
with True Image.
Installing True Image 10.0
Whether you’ve purchased the
downloadable version or physical media, installing
Acronis True Image 10.0 Home is as quick and
easy (it’s a good idea to temporarily turn off any
anti-virus or programs running in the background,
before installing True Image). Just start the
install routine and follow the onscreen prompts. If
you select the Full installation of True
Image or the Custom installation and
check all the options, you’ll install the Acronis
BartPE Plug-in which will allow you to
incorporate True Image into a
BartPE recovery CD or DVD disc.
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the main installation screen. From here, you
can install True Image, download the
latest User's Guide which requires
the free
Adobe Reader; or go to
Acronis' Technical Support Registration
page. |
Click
next at the Welcome dialog box to
start the installation. |
The
License Agreement for your perusal.
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Unless
you want to install True Image in
15-day trial mode, enter your Serial
Number here. If you've purchased the
upgrade version of Acronis True Image
10.0 Home, you'll be presented with an
additional prompt to enter your serial
number from a previous version of True
Image. |
Select
the type of install you want here.
Typical installs everything but the
Bart
PE plug-in, Custom allows you to select
which True Image components to
install and change the default target folder
for the installation. Complete
installs the whole enchilada to the default
installation folder. |
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accept the default here, or change it to
Install for the current user only if
your account has administrator privileges
and you share your PC with others that have
limited user accounts. |
If you
want to make any changes, you can click the
Back button otherwise, click
Proceed to start the installation. |
True
Image 10.0 Home will install in less than a
minute. |
Once the
installation is complete, click Close. |
Click
Yes to reboot your PC. If you are
upgrading directly over a previous version
and don't see this prompt to reboot, you'll
have to uninstall True Image and
reinstall the newer version "clean." |
If you’re upgrading from an earlier
version or build, you normally don’t have to
uninstall it to install the latest version. However,
you should always be prompted to reboot your PC
immediately after installing True Image. If
you aren’t prompted to reboot at the end of the
installation, that means the upgrade failed for some
reason.
To confirm whether the upgrade was
successful, reboot and check under HelpàAbout
on the menu bar. If it wasn’t, uninstall True
Image, reboot, and re-install the newer version
again. You’ll be prompted for the serial number of
your previous version of True Image, so you
don’t have to re-install the old version first, and
then the new version on top of it.
In order to download the latest
True Image updates, you must
register your copy of
Acronis True Image 10.0 Home.
The True Image 10.0 Interface
True Image
is divided into a Menu Bar, Button Bar, a
Microsoft Outlook-style Side Bar, and the
Main Task Window. The Status Bar at the
bottom displays any in-progress operations. You can
perform most of True Image’s operations from
any of these locations for convenience, as well as
hide the ones you don’t want to use by clicking the
arrows that collapse them out of sight. The default
backup and restoration options, as well as the
ability to send notifications when an operation has
been completed, can be configured through Options
on the Menu Bar. You can even change the fonts used
in True Image’s menus and display panels if
the default system font doesn’t suit you.
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Image 10.0 Home
has a leaner and cleaner look from
Version 9 and earlier versions. You can
perform True Image's most
frequently-used functions from the classic
Menu Bar under Operations as
well as the Main Task Window. |
View
allows you to tweak the appearance of
the Menu Bar, Tool Bar and Status
Bar. |
True
Image's most frequently used tools can
be accessed through here. You can also
configure the program's default options from
the Tools menu as well. |
Online
and web support can be accessed through
here, as well as the obligatory "About"
information that shows you the True Image
version and build number, your serial
number and other pertinent information. |
The
Toolbar allows you to perform True
Image's most frequently used operations
as well. Here we see the button for running
the Acronis Startup Recovery Manager
wizard. The two grayed-out arrow buttons on
the left become active when switching
between operation pages in the Main Task
Window. |
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button runs a verification job
against backup archives to make sure they
aren't damaged or corrupt. |
This one
creates the all-important Bootable Rescue
Media that will allow you to load
True Image and restore your system if
Windows becomes unbootable or if you need to
recover from a failed hard drive. |
This
button creates the Acronis Secure Zone—a
special partition for storing backups—on
local hard drives. |
Click
this one, and you'll bring up the
Operations Log where you can view status
messages of all your backup and restore
jobs. |
Need
help? Click this button. |
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takes you to the Acronis Customer Service
page. Clicking the "Acronis" logo in the
upper-right hand corner takes you directly
to Acronis' home page. |
Click the
little arrow on either the Menu or Tool
Bar... |
...and
you can collapse it out of sight to give you
more viewing real estate—or if you'd just
rather not see it all. Clicking the arrow
again restores the bar. |
You can
do the same for the options on the Side
Bar... |
...like
so. The Status Bar below displays the
currently selected operation on the left,
and any currently active operations and
their results on the right. Double-clicking
on the results brings up the True Image
Operations Log. |
A relatively minor but noticeable and
welcome improvement over
Version 9.0 is the removal of the Task Bar
and window used by the True Image’s
Scheduled Tasks from the lower half of the main
window. The result is a cleaner look for the
interface. Now when you want to schedule a backup
job, or perform any other task under the Manage
Tasks and or Pick a Tool category, you’ll
be taken to a second page in the main window for
performing those tasks. A pair of Navigation
Buttons on the left side of the button bar that
are grayed-out when you launch True Image,
turn green and become active whenever you choose a
task on the second page, allowing you to flip back
and forth between pages with ease. New True Image
users will definitely like True Image 10.0
Home’s clean, simple interface, while veteran
users will appreciate that all the program options
and selections are exactly where they’d expect them
to be without having to hunt around for everything.
All of True Image’s functions
are wizard-driven with Plain-English
descriptions of each step. A summary at the end
outlines the operation you are about to perform, and
you are always given an opportunity to go back to
make changes or abort the operation. True Image’s
clear and simple Online Help is always one
mouse-click away from several convenient locations
on the interface (unlike Version 9.0, you can now
output help topics to a printer). Clicking the blue
and white question mark icon from within a wizard
immediately brings up help on the current operation
being performed. More detailed information on how to
use True Image, trouble-shooting, technical
tips, and definitions of backup technology jargon,
is available in the 94-page True Image 10.0
Home User’s Guide, which can be
downloaded in Adobe Acrobat .PDF format from the
Acronis web site.
Bootable Rescue Media: The First
Step in Protecting Your Data
As soon as you install Acronis
True Image 10 Home, your first order of business
should be to create Bootable Rescue Media via
the Acronis Media Builder wizard, which will
allow you to start True Image and recover
your system from a True Image backup if you
can’t boot into Windows. If you bought and installed
the boxed, version, you can boot True Image
directly from the CD.
When creating rescue media through
the wizard, you’re given the option of installing
either a Full version of True Image to
the media that includes drivers for USB, PC Card
(PCMCIA) and SCSI disks; a Safe version
without these drivers—or both. The full version
requires 35.45 MB of installation space, the safe
version 16.83 MB; installing both will take up 47.62
MB. You can also set the number of seconds the
rescue media waits for user input at the menu before
launching True Image.