Neil, sounds interesting, but I'm afraid I don't follow you. What's a SuperDuper clone?
Cheers, Steven On 3/8/08 8:15 PM, "Neil Houghton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi Steven & Ronni > > Of course if you go the "belt & braces" of Time machine for the archiving > backed up by a SuperDuper bootable clone for disaster recovery, your clone > would fulfil the "backing it up in some other way" and would be as current > as your last SuperDuper clone. > > As mentioned on previous posts, Virtual Machine files (ie Parallels or VM > Fusion Windows machine files) are also very large files which change > constantly (when you have the VM fired up) so they give the same problem - > and can be handled by the same solution. > > Cheers > > > Neil -- The WA Macintosh User Group Mailing List -- Archives - <http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/archives.shtml> Guidelines - <http://www.wamug.org.au/mailinglist/guidelines.shtml> Unsubscribe - <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>