08 Mar 2008 12:27:47 | Richard Lowe
Imagine the following nightmare: you've worked hard on your site
for months, tweaking it until it looks perfect. You've got great
content, excellent graphics and a wonderful design. Thousands of
visitors are pouring in every day, and you are getting dozens of
guestbook entries all telling you how wonderful you've done and
hundreds of emails praising your good work.
One day you go to access your site and you get an error. Your
site does not respond. You feel a little annoyed and try again a
few minutes later ... your browser still times out. This goes on
for hours and then for a full day. You feel panic rising in your
gorge and your chest tightens up. You haven't slept and your
wife is getting worried.
You've tried over and over to call your host's support number
and it does not pick up. Their website doesn't show any problems
... it's a weekend so they are all at home watching the game.
Monday comes and you finally get an automated response to one of
your panicky emails. Your host
- has had a hard disk crash and didn't have a backup ...
- or they didn't have any money and closed their doors ...
- or a hacker attacked their site and wiped out all of the files
- or your made a mistake with FTP and accidentally deleted all
your work
- or the host got hit by the dreaded xyz virus ...
- or "fill in the blank"
And you didn't have a backup of your site.
I have even read report about one user who had over a gigabyte
on his website of years of hard work with no backup of his own.
His host decided he was getting too much traffic and simply
deleted his site. The poor guy and to send a note to everyone on
his email list begging people to check their browser cache's to
see if they could send him the graphics and pages ... it took
six months but he rebuilt his site (and now he has a backup).
The moral of the story ... backup your web site. I don't care
whether you've got it on Homestead, AOL or Addr.com, if you
don't make your own backup you are taking the chance that you
could loose all of your work ... forever.
How do you back up your site? What I do is make sure that I edit
my site on my OWN hard drive, then upload it as I make changes.
That way I always have my own copy (and, of course, I make a
backup of that also). If you don't or can't do that, then just
use FTP to copy the files to your own hard drive once in a while.
If you have no other choice, you can use the "Save As..."
functions to save the graphics and HTML pages. Note that if you
do this you will capture your sites banners also so this is not
the preferred method.
So backup your site. You will be glad that you did.
About Author :
Richard Lowe Jr. is the webmaster of Internet Tips And Secrets.
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