September 2007

8 More Absolutely Cool, Totally Free Utilities

Here's our latest collection of dynamite freeware for your USB toolkit
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SideBar    Screencasting with Wink

My only complaint is that LocatePC is never absolutely sure that something has changed. In my testing, I've determined that my home router has a tendency to blink offline for a minute every so often. When it does, as soon as the Wi-Fi interface comes back up, Windows thinks it has a new connection (even though the IP address is the same) and LocatePC sends me an alert message. I get a few of these per day. My simple solution to this annoyance was to create a custom mailbox on my mail server for all my LocatePC notices from all my PCs and laptops. Hopefully, I'll never need to look through all that information to try to recover a stolen system. However, if misfortune strikes, I'll have a good chance of discovering the computer's location when it comes back online and LocatePC emails me.

SyncBack
For years, I'd been looking for a reliable file-synchronization utility to help me perform automated backups of my data across my network. After all, who needs tape or CD backups if disk space is so cheap that you can simply have one system back up to another? I've tried a number of solutions over the years—from open-source to commercial—but SyncBack is the only solution I've stuck with.

SyncBack helps you easily back up (or synchronize) files to another location on the same drive, a different drive, a different storage medium (e.g., CD-RW, CompactFlash, USB thumb-drive), an FTP server, a network share, or a Zip archive. Unlike other utilities in this space that try to accomplish too much, SyncBack really nails its interface—which Figure 7 shows—with an approach that's simple enough to follow but doesn't skimp on features or configuration options.

I use this tool for daily, weekly, and monthly backups on my home network. By setting up three target directories on a removable 300GB USB 2.0 drive and using SyncBack's built-in scheduling capabilities (which populate the appropriate commands into the Windows scheduler service), I've created three backup profiles: one to run nightly at 5 p.m., one to run weekly at 3 a.m., and one to run on the first day of every month at 1 a.m.. I've selected a backup profile and instructed SyncBack to delete any files in the destination that aren't in the source. Now, I rest easy at night knowing that my data is backed up every single evening. These backups have saved me on more than one occasion when I've accidentally wiped out development code. By simply going to my always-up-to-date backups, I'm ready to go again. For absolutely critical files, I also have an offsite backup profile that delivers my files to an FTP server on the other side of the country.

SyncBack also supports a sync profile (i.e., changes on both sides are replicated to each other), as well as the use of direct UNC path names. The tool also supports the use of FTP servers as destinations. SyncBack can ensure that certain applications are closed before running its profiles and can email you the results of each profile it runs—or email you only when an error occurs while executing a profile.

If you have file synchronization needs on your network that you haven't figured out a workable solution for, I would suggest you take a look at SyncBack and see if it will meet your needs. The amount of functionality available in the freeware version is impressive, and its execution is rock solid.

Expand Your Toolkit
I hope some of the utilities I've described can help you reduce the number of hours you spend every day on inventory/monitoring and security tasks. For one more fantastic utility—which didn't fit into this article's categories—check out the "Screencasting with Wink" sidebar. Download all these tools and give them a try! In the meantime, I'll be keeping my eye out for more great free utilities. Check back next fall for a new batch.

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