Okay. Thanks for your answer.
Is your external harddisc called time capsule? Are there any differences 
between a normal external harddisc and external Apple harddisc? I've find other 
external harddiscs much cheeper than Apples external harddiscs.

Best regards Søren.

-----Original Message-----
From: Scott Howell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thu, 18 Sep 2008 05:26:24 -0400
To: General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac OS X   by the 
blind
Subject: Re: Time Machine VS Manual Backup

>Actually yes you would. The reason is that if you were to delete  
>something, TIme Machine has no clue whether you intended to do this or  
>made a mistake. I would not worry about that either. The reason is  
>that you can set Time Machine to automatically delete old backups so  
>this way at some point that 10Gb of data you dumped will be dumped  
>itself. Time Machine is very good at managing the space on your drive.  
>I would recommend having at least a drive equal to or larger than your  
>internal drive. My Time Capsule has 500Gb and I just got a new iMac  
>with 300Gb storage. Of course we backup all the machines to the Time  
>Capsule so space will become limited at some point if I really filled  
>this drive. :) However, the good thing is you can slap a usb hub on  
>the Time Capsule and dangle more drives and use those if you wanted.
>The good thing is, drives are getting cheaper. Ah yes, I remember the  
>day when a 120Mb drive cost me $1,000. Imagine that.
>On Sep 18, 2008, at 1:36 AM, Søren Jensen wrote:
>
>> Hi Scott.
>> I've also got a little external harddisc I'll use to backup my Mac.  
>> I've made a backup of the whole system. What happen if I de-site to  
>> remove some programs? Can I choose to remove these programs in Time  
>> machine as well? If I remove 10 gb of data which I don't use  
>> anymore, do I then have to remove it manually from my backup disc?
>> Best regards
>> Søren Jensen
>> Mail & MSN:
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Website:
>> http://www.coolfortheblind.dk/
>>
>> On 18/09/2008, at 01.07, Scott Howell wrote:
>>
>>> The short answer is Time Machine will backup your Mac to a drive  
>>> and will continue to do so hourly. It will allow you to immediately  
>>> go and retrieve something you've deleted and possibly dumped from  
>>> your trash and suddenly realize you want it. Also, it's done  
>>> automatically so you don't have to think about it. Of course it'll  
>>> only backup items that have been changed, are  new etc. Copying and  
>>> so forth is of course another option available to you, provided you  
>>> are faithful in doing this on a regular basis.
>>> Hope that helps.
>>> On Sep 17, 2008, at 4:54 PM, Tiffany D wrote:
>>>
>>>> Ok, so I got my new external hard drive and am wondering.  What's  
>>>> the
>>>> difference between using Time Machine to back up my files and just
>>>> copying and pasting?  I want to back up things on a few different
>>>> computers: my Mac, my parents' XP desktop, my XP desktop and  
>>>> possibly
>>>> my XP laptop, if I can ever get it to work long enough to do that.
>>>>
>>>> Thanks,
>>>> Tiffanitsa
>>>> -- 
>>>> http://tiffany.yourpassionconsultant.com
>>>> (Adults only.  Parties and products for your sentual needs!
>>>> Educational, tasteful and fun!)
>>>>
>>>
>>> Scott Howell
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>Scott Howell
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>
>
>


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