Carbonite: For Dummies?

According to a recently released survey by Compuware, most data loss is attributable to either user negligence or malice. Only 1% of data loss is due to hackers. I loved the headline on this story: "3/4 idiots, 1/4 bitterness."

I have to confess to being part of the "idiot" crowd. Three weeks ago I left my laptop sitting on my seat when I got off the train in New York. I remembered it just in time to see my train, with laptop still aboard, disappearing down the track. Except for occasionally recovering individual files that I accidentally delete or overwrite, I haven't actually had a PC disaster since starting Carbonite 3 years ago. So, aside from the pain of having to buy a new laptop, it was fun to use my own product to get everything back. I was really proud of how well it worked.

What I don't see in the Compuware survey is data lost to hard drive failure. For some reason this doesn't show up in the survey, even though I will bet you that it tops all the other categories. We use a LOT of hard drives in our data center, and our statistics show that roughly 3% of all hard drives will fail each year. That's why we use RAID arrays which are 36 million times more reliable than a single drive. Google also publishes their disk failure rate, and it's roughly the same as ours. Hard drives are a data disaster waiting to happen, in our experience. That's why you need a LOT of redundancy in your data storage architecture, as we do. We store our customers' encrypted data on 16 drive arrays. We would have to lose 3 of the 16 drives simultaneously AND your PC would have to crash all at the same time before any data is lost. When you figure the odds of this happening, it's very very close to zero.

I hope you never leave your laptop on Amtrak, but if you do, you'll be glad you've got Carbonite.


Dave
CEO, Carbonite

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Comments

October 31. 2008 18:54

Bill Greenberg - Good Computer Guy

Ouch! Never a good idea to forget your laptop anywhere... Frown I'm sure someone is enjoying a nice laptop now though. I've never lost an entire machine but I've had plenty of corrupted drives and complete failures to know to rely on Carbonite.

Bill Greenberg - Good Computer Guy

November 4. 2008 08:41

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December 23. 2008 16:24

David James

Speaking of Carbonite for Dummies, there needs to be one. I've been round and round with chat support and email support for weeks trying to find out if I can restore a file for which I accidently clicked "do not back this up." I contacted chat support within the hour and was told to send log files so they could help restore it, then I got an email 3 days later saying the file would have been deleted from Carbonite servers in 48 hours (in which case why couldn't the first guy restore it for me?). Now today - 3 weeks later, I get an email saying the file gets deleted from Carbonite in 30 days. I'm so confused. Can I or can I not restore that file? Is "do not back this up" an immediate death sentence for a backup file or can it be restored. The chat and email support people can't seem to give me a straight answer, and frankly I'm not willing to pay up for phone support at this point.

David James

January 14. 2009 05:01

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January 14. 2009 11:30

Len Pallazola

David,

I'm sorry to hear that you didn't have the greatest experience with customer support. The confusion is likely due to the fact that "Do not back this up" is handled differently if you make that selection within the Carbonite Backup Drive than if you make it to the file directly (on your own hard drive).

If you select "Do not back this up" on a file within the Carbonite Backup Drive, it will be removed from the servers between 48 and 72 hours later.

If you select "Do not back this up" on a file within your computer itself, it will be removed from the servers 30 days later.

You should be able to browse to that file and restore it within the Carbonite Backup Drive, unless that's where you selected "Do not back this up".

If you're still having trouble, feel free to contact me at len.pal @ carbonite.com and I'll make sure you get the information you need.

Sincerely,

Len Pallazola
Manager, Customer Service Systems
Carbonite, Inc.
www.carbonite.com

Len Pallazola

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