Patrick’s Musings

A Place for me to rant about politics, development, university and technology

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.

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