David E. Ross wrote:

I spent about $50 for Acronis True Image Home 2015 last October.
This price included later updates.  For one PC or one MAC, that price
still applies.  No, I don't know if it can operate under Linux.

With several other good backup applications (software), why would
someone spend four times as much for backup hardware?

A good backup system must have several essential features (top three, not an exhaustive list):

1) The backup media must be removable or located separately from the computer. If your house goes up in flames, and your backup was on a shelf next to the computer, you have no backup. In the case of removable media, you should have several, and make a habit of removing the newest one and bringing back the oldest one each day.

2) The backup system must be automated and scheduled. If you have to think to do it yourself, you'll forget or make excuses, and you'll have no backup. Murphy's law states that the failure will occur on the day when you forgot.

3) The backup system must be capable of restoring all or part of your system from bare metal. If your computer dies or you lose a file and you can't restore it, you have no backup.

So it's nice that you didn't spend a lot on software, but that doesn't tell us whether you're safe. Can you pass these three tests?

--
War doesn't determine who's right, just who's left.
--
Paul B. Gallagher
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