BACKUP TOOLS

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  • Transfer video, audio and photo files amongst your iPhone, computer and iTunes
  • Backup files with iPhone Transfer
  • Use iPhone as a portable hard disk
  • The ideal iPhone backup tool to transfer from iPhone to iTunes
  • All generations of iPhone are supported – iPhone, iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS
  • Compatible with iPod, iPod Touch
  • Newly supports iPhone/iPod touch Firmware 3.1.3 and iTunes 9.1.


ImTOO iPhone Transfer is the ultimate upgrade for your iPhone. Sick of iTunes' limitations? Then this is your solution. Transfer files between your computer, iPhone, and iTunes. With the ImTOO iPhone Transfer, you are free to transfer videos, music, and photos from PC to iPhone and iPhone to PCBackup files from iPhone to computer and transfer your iPhone music and videos onto your computer and iTunes.
ImTOO iPhone Transfer works well with iPhoneiPhone 3GiPhone 3GS and eveniPod touch, and fully supports transferring files from PC to iPhone. No other iPod transferring software currently on the market is able to do this with the same efficiency. As an iPhone backup tool, ImTOO iPhone Transfer helps you transfer iPhone music, videos and photos to your computer hard drive. It can also transfer files from iPhone straight to iTunes.

Main Functions

  • iPhone to PC transferiPhone to PC Transfer
    Transfer iPhone music, videos, movies and photos from iPhone to computer for iPhone content backup.
  • PC to iPhone transferPC to iPhone Transfer
    Best iTunes Alternative can transfer music, videos, movies, photos on your computer to iPhone with no need to remove your original files.
  • iPhone to iTunes transferiPhone to iTunes Transfer
    ImTOO iPhone Transfer can import iPhone audio and video files to iTunes library.
  • PC to iPhone transfer iPhone as a Portable Hard Disk
    Open iPhone with Windows Explorer and use it as a portable hard disk to manage your iPhone contents.


four-apps-that-willmight-keep-your-wife
...when her computer crashes.


Prepping a close one's computer for a catastrophic event is kind of like stockpiling supplies for a fallout shelter. When the proverbial bomb drops, you'll be safe - as long as you've got the right provisions.

1.Gmail:-I took the liberty of setting up what I think is a phenomenally crafty stealth email backup. Step one: enable IMAP and copy all the old messages to GMail. Step two: set up GMail to automatically check our ISP's crappy POP server. Step Three: set Outlook Express to access GMail via POP and leave the original copy on the server. Step four: twiddle thumbs. All emails are now stored in the cloud where a hard drive is a lot less likely to take a steaming hot bath in coffee.

I've chosen to use POP instead of IMAP because of the odd problem we've had with our GMail for Domains access. Phone calls from home that start "Why is it telling me the server can't be contacted?" aren't good for my health.

2. Cobian Backup. I've used Cobian for a while now. Well, that's not totally accurate. It was installed, and I had a job created to back files up to my trusty old XBox's FTP server, but it kept failing and I never bothered to correct the problem. Since I took ten minutes to fix the issue, it's been working great. I've currently got it saving archives to an external SATA drive as well as the XBox.

Cobian is set to grab the bulk of the important stuff: My Documents, Music, Application Data, Local Settings, Desktop, and the like. It's set to run nightly, and shadow copy support means it'll back up even if certain apps (like Firefox, OE, and Photoshop) are left running.



3. GBridge. Ok, this might not work for everyone, but I work for a smallish family business and I'm "the computer guy." That means I get to build my own workstation and hand-pick the parts in it. The RAID mirror makes an ideal location for offsite storage of encrypted data, and GBridge is a handy way to get it there.

Its Hamachi-like VPN and autosync make maintaining a spare set of fonts, Photoshop brushes, and other things I usually forget so easy it almost hurts (actually forgetting these causes a great deal more hurt). As a bonus, GBridge also gives me zero-config VNC access to troubleshoot other problems I've caused on my wife's laptop from the safety of my office.


4. XXClone. XXClone is a very easy-to-use app for cloning a system drive while still in Windows. It's been faster than Macrium Reflect for me, and Macrium's free version doesn't support incremental backups. After the initial copy, synching the new changes is obviously a lot quicker than re-cloning the entire drive.

One downside is that you can't get rid of the confirmation dialog in the free version - which puts the kibosh on scheduling with command line switches. Cloning a drive on a schedule is definitely the best way to cover your butt, and it may be worth paying for in your case.

Add that any decent file recovery software is a must have as well to look like a hero in the eyes of your wife.

For me it's the initial clone with all the vital apps that matters. If I remember to do a few incrementals here and there, GREAT. If not, well, it's the data that's most important and I think I've got that covered.

I won't guarantee that running these four programs will allow you to escape totally unscathed, but if they prevent one angry phone call to your workplace then I've done my job.




XXClone