New Laptops
I’ve been reading with interest Tony Pearson’s blog Inside System Storage as the IBM view on things is often very different to the EMC/NetApp/Everyone Else view on things.
The last two posts have been about getting a new laptop, and all the effort Tony has gone to getting all his data synched (he is currently searching for a crossover cable).
When I received a new laptop at EMC, not because the company automatically replaced them after 4 years, but rather because the hinge snapped about a week after the warranty expired, I had some similar issues, thuogh certainly not 134 applications to reinstall.
As an early adopter of Dropbox all my important files are synchronised with the cloud. Anything customer sensitive that I couldn’t host online was kept on a Truecrypt encrypted USB key that lives on my keychain. (It used to live in my pocket, but after two trips through the washing machine I moved it to the keychain (If you’re interested it’s a Patriot XPorter XT)).
So old laptop boots up a Darik’s Boot & Nuke and starts wiping. The new laptop boots up the corporate image which I promptly transfer into a vmware image using vmware converter. I then install my OS of choice, which was the Windows 7 beta at the time, VMware server & Dropbox. An hour later (using LAN sync and getting the data off my desktop not the Dropbox server) I have all my files back. I then install my base applications that I cannot live without, Firefox, Launchy, PeaZip, Java, Acrobat Viewer, PDF Printer, Open Office & Truecrypt to start.
I could have saved an hour and just installed Dropbox in the corporate image, but where is the fun in that. I currently have 3 desktop computers & 2 laptops. Thanks to Dropbox I always have my files. I can even access them from my Android phone bringing support to a total of 4 operating systems, Windows, Linux, Mac, Android.

This is default description text on Padangan Themes, of course you can change this text via you profile administration.