Right, so any malware floating around on your Windows box can now mess with your mac files. This is why I run McAfee or the like on my Windows virtual machines. But the end result is that there is nothing irreplaceable on my virtual machines so I can toss it in the trash and start over if I need to. The rest goes into a common folder and is backed up by TimeMachine.

CB

On 2/4/12 5:35 AM, Scott Howell wrote:
In that case Chris it would make sense to share a folder as you said. I never 
save documents or anything in a VM for that reason. Of course if your wise you 
limit the VM i.e. windows to only see one folder which is a security measure.

On Feb 3, 2012, at 10:41 PM, Chris Blouch wrote:

While I haven't done it I know that there are settings on VMWare to share the 
documents folder between your Mac and Virtual windows instance. That would be a 
nice way to get your windows documents backed up, although it wouldn't help 
with the rest of your Windows setup. Normally you don't want to have the 
virtual machine image backed up by time machine because it is a giant 
monolithic file. So one little change made under Windows and the entire 
multi-gigabyte disk image is flagged for backing up again. Possible if you are 
on a local fast big time machine drive, but still kind of a waste.

CB

On 2/3/12 8:51 PM, Scott Howell wrote:
Alex,

I'm not so sure you could not have your windows and Mac data backed up to the 
same location. Of course it would require a lot of trickery, but nothing is 
necessarily impossible. You could possibly pull it off with a well crafted 
APple script on the Mac side.

On Feb 3, 2012, at 4:46 PM, Alex Hall wrote:

I know, but since I primarily use Windows for now, I pay for my
Windows carbonite subscription. As I understand it, even though the
Mini is one computer, I would have to pay again to back up my mac os
partition. Until I use the mac more and start leaving my files there,
I will just use time machine to keep my apps and settings up to date.
Ideally, there would be some magical place from which both mac and
windows could read and to which they could write in perfect harmony,
but the file system war seems to preclude any such dream from ever
becoming a reality. Too bad, since I could just back up said magical
land with carbonite and let local backups store the less critical
settings and apps.

On 2/3/12, agent086b<agent0...@bigpond.com>   wrote:
Hi,
I am sure you already know, you can use Carbonite on your Mac.
Max.

-------- Original Message  --------
Subject: Re: time machine?
From: Alex Hall<mehg...@gmail.com>
To:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Date: Fri, 3 Feb 2012 15:54:11 -0500
Thanks for the responses. Regarding my last question:
1. You create a novel in Text Edit, saving it as a single document.
2. You back up your mac, which, of course, backs up your novel in the
process. Let us say this was done on January 1.
3. You come back to the novel a week later, making extensive
modifications. Unfortunately, your mac goes crazy and you restore from
your January 1 backup.
What happens to your novel? Do you retain the January 8 version, or is
that overwritten with the January 1 version? I have Carbonite on
Windows, but before I had that I tended to save to my hard drive and
make backups every month or so. In the above example, then, I would
not have backed up every itteration of the novel, and would probably
have done a backup a few weeks later. The restore, then, would happen
between my backups, so what would happen to the file in question? I
hope that makes sense.

On 2/3/12, Scott Howell<scottn3...@gmail.com>    wrote:
Alex answers follow below:

On Feb 3, 2012, at 1:50 PM, Alex Hall wrote:
1. Will any external hard drive work?
ALex you may use any external drive you like. However, you should ensure
you
have of course sufficient capacity and in fact you may consider having a
drive that is at least twice the capacity of the drive you are backing
up.
THis is not a requirement, but a consideration.


2. Do I need to format it in a special way? If so, can I make a
partition on it to use for backups and leave the rest readable by
Windows computers?
I do not recall whether it matters, but the TIme Machine utility takes
care
of this if I recall correctly. You could split the drive into multiple
partitions and choose where you want TIme Machine to place the backups.

3. Is time machine fully accessible?
I have not had any problems using TIme Machine.


4. Are time machine backups readable? That is, if I wanted a file off
an old backup but did not want to restore the whole thing, could I
just browse to that file and copy it like normal?
Yes.

5. Is anything not backed up?
The only files that come to mind which are not backed up are those that
have
no impact on operation of your Mac. In other words these are files you do
not have direct access to and are only used by the current instance of
the
OS. So if you restored the entire machine or cloned the drive you would
not
want these files.

6. If I had to restore, and I had newer files than in the backup, what
happens? In other words, is there a way to restore only system folders
so that files modified since the backup are not overwritten with older
versions?
Interesting question since I'm not sure how this condition  would occur
really. I'm trying to invision a scenario  that might apply in this case.

hth,


Thanks in advance.
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Have a great day,
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mehg...@gmail.com;http://www.facebook.com/mehgcap

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