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Thread: HELP! With external hard drive

  1. #1
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    HELP! With external hard drive

    Purchased the Western Digital external hard drive and need some help.

    I ran WD backup and got a message "Some files could not be backed up" It it listed a file or two but had no idea what it was. I ran backup from the user down. I could go to the external hard drive and open some files and look at them so they did back up.

    I ran backup again but this time from Windows down. This time I got the same message "Some files could not be backed up" but this time it listed a whole bunch. Way too many to look through.

    -What an I doing wrong?

    -Should I just drag and drop the files I want to keep? (mostly important documents and my photos)

    -Using windows backup better? My windows backup says "For Windows 7" but I have a 7 machine that was upgraded to Windows 10 right away when new.
    "Remember back in the day, when things were made by hand, and people took pride in their work?"
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  2. #2
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    When a computer is turned on, it opens many files, some of them being temporary, others system files. These may not be getting backed up.
    You might try starting the machine in safe mode. F8 while it's booting up. http://support.eset.com/kb2268/?locale=en_US
    I backup MY files. Documents, pictures, etc.
    Never, under any circumstances, consume a laxative and sleeping pill, on the same night

  3. #3
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    Dave, I have had a WD external for a few years now and whenever I see files that could not be backed up - I click on the file and have it run back up again. It is odd but running the file through it the second time seems to work.
    Steve

    “You never know what you got til it's gone!”
    Please don’t let that happen!
    Become a financial Contributor today!

  4. #4
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    Another issue I am having is I can not eject the drive using "safely remove hardware" It says drive in use, close program etc....." according to the LED on the drive it is not in use or working.
    How can I tell what program is the issue?
    "Remember back in the day, when things were made by hand, and people took pride in their work?"
    - Rick Dale

  5. #5
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    Dave, I hit the power button on the drive. It will go through a shut down sequence and then power off. After it shuts down I unplug it from the computer.
    Steve

    “You never know what you got til it's gone!”
    Please don’t let that happen!
    Become a financial Contributor today!

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dave Lehnert View Post
    Purchased the Western Digital external hard drive and need some help.

    I ran WD backup and got a message "Some files could not be backed up" It it listed a file or two but had no idea what it was. I ran backup from the user down. I could go to the external hard drive and open some files and look at them so they did back up.

    I ran backup again but this time from Windows down. This time I got the same message "Some files could not be backed up" but this time it listed a whole bunch. Way too many to look through.

    -What an I doing wrong?

    -Should I just drag and drop the files I want to keep? (mostly important documents and my photos)

    -Using windows backup better? My windows backup says "For Windows 7" but I have a 7 machine that was upgraded to Windows 10 right away when new.
    what i normally backup are files, photos and thunderbird and firefox settings. I use windows 7 image maker to produce an image file for total backup.

  7. #7
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    Here is what I use if backing up Windows installs:

    http://www.terabyteunlimited.com/image-for-linux.htm

    Windows isn't running at all so there are no issues with file locking or any of that. I've backed up & restored Windows 98 to Windows 7 using it and no problems. I'm not sure about Windows 8 & 10, they don't shut down fully by default, they use fast startup, some sort of hybrid hibernation and the file system may not be clean if copied as is. I've set fast startup on my Win 10 install to "off" and it makes little difference, especially on SSD equipped machines.

  8. #8

    Thumbs up

    Quote Originally Posted by Dave Lehnert View Post
    Purchased the Western Digital external hard drive and need some help.

    I ran WD backup and got a message "Some files could not be backed up" It it listed a file or two but had no idea what it was. I ran backup from the user down. I could go to the external hard drive and open some files and look at them so they did back up.

    I ran backup again but this time from Windows down. This time I got the same message "Some files could not be backed up" but this time it listed a whole bunch. Way too many to look through.

    -What an I doing wrong?

    -Should I just drag and drop the files I want to keep? (mostly important documents and my photos)

    -Using windows backup better? My windows backup says "For Windows 7" but I have a 7 machine that was upgraded to Windows 10 right away when new.

    I recommend use Acronis for backup in future. When I was a QA, it was our main program to backup. Works perfect

  9. #9
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    Here is the deal. If you want to be able to restore your computer in a short while after a disk crash, you are going to need a disk image, which has already been mentioned. There are a few free programs that will do that and several commercial programs. It is of no value to save system and installation files in any other form because they are unusable. What I normally do is just back up the data files and accept the risk that I may have to reload the operating system and all the programs from scratch if a drive fails. My data is all that is irreplaceable.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Art Mann View Post
    Here is the deal. If you want to be able to restore your computer in a short while after a disk crash, you are going to need a disk image, which has already been mentioned. There are a few free programs that will do that and several commercial programs. It is of no value to save system and installation files in any other form because they are unusable. What I normally do is just back up the data files and accept the risk that I may have to reload the operating system and all the programs from scratch if a drive fails. My data is all that is irreplaceable.

    The correct approach to take IMO. When I was using Windows, I'd create a second smaller partition on the hard drive. Set applications to save to that smaller partition by default. Then just back up the data partition frequently. For the O.S. partition I'd install the O.S. and primary applications and image that. That reduced the likelihood of restoring a problem.

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