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   alt.os.linux.mint      Looks pretty on the outside, thats it!      30,566 messages   

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   Message 30,465 of 30,566   
   Axel to occam   
   Re: Good backup program for Linux Mint   
   15 Feb 26 12:15:23   
   
   From: none@not.here   
      
   occam wrote:   
   > On 14/02/2026 00:08, Shimon wrote:   
   >> On 13/02/2026 13:14, occam wrote:   
   >>> I'm currently transitioning from Windows to Linux Mint (under dual   
   >>> boot). Before I abandon Win10 for good I want to be sure I am able do   
   >>> everything in LM that I normally do under Win10.   
   >>>   
   >>> Is there an LM way of backing up /synchronising my data files onto an   
   >>> external drive? My favourite Windows program is SyncBack, which allows   
   >>> the synching of the two drives (i.e. incremental backup) without the   
   >>> need for a full backup every time. It shows me which files are to be   
   >>> deleted, which are to be updated and which are new files to be   
   >>> transferred - displayed in an easy-to-follow screen.   
   >>>   
   >>> Thanks for any pointers.   
   >>>   
   >>>   
   >> These tools are great if you want easy file or folder backups without   
   >> much setup:   
   >>   
   >> Déjà Dup Backups    
   >> A user-friendly GUI backup tool (often installed by default on GNOME   
   desktops). Supports scheduled backups, encryption, and cloud services (e.g.,   
   Google Drive).   
   >>   
   >> TimeShift    
   >> Creates system snapshots (like Windows System Restore). Ideal for restoring   
   your system after a bad update or change   
   >>   
   >> GNOME Backups    
   >> Simple graphical backup utility with scheduled backups and   
   >> incremental support.   
   >>   
   >> rsync    
   >>   
   >> The classic file-sync tool. Efficient and scriptable for custom backups,   
   network backups, and incremental copies.   
   >>   
   >>   
   >> rclone    
   >> Syncs and backs up to cloud storage providers (Google Drive, OneDrive, S3,   
   etc.).   
   >>   
   >>   
   > Wow! Thanks for the menu. I'll work my way down. (Deja Dup and rsync I   
   > have already seen mentioned above.)   
   >   
      
   I could be wrong, but I think if you use Rescuezilla/Clonezilla you can   
   extract files from the backup image   
      
   --   
   Linux Mint 22.3   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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