Friday, November 16, 2012

Unraveled: Mac Disk Cloning and its Real-Time Applications

Mac hard drive cloning is a process of duplicating the contents of your OS X drive on another drive or media. The process not just copies your data files, but moves your operating system, installed applications with settings, and drivers to the new storage device. This method is way better than the traditional way of backing up operating systems that involves copying all the files to a separate hard drive. Cloning creates a replica of the Mac drive, instead of copying only the contained files and folders.

There are a number of real-time applications where hard drive cloning proves beneficial. Some of them are listed below:

Provisioning New Workstations
The process of installing an operating system from scratch takes considerable amount of time. This becomes painstaking, if you need to provision new workstations and reinstall the operating system on each individual machine. With the help of Mac drive clone, you can copy the entire system configuration (including operating system) to multiple hard drives for setting up a network of identical Mac machines.

Easy Backup and Restore Tasks
Cloning is a good way to create incremental or differential backups and you can create as many backups as you want. You can choose to take backups daily, monthly, or yearly. This gives you the flexibility to restore your Mac to any known good configuration that existed before.

Upgrading Hard Drives
In order to meet their storage needs, Mac users often require upgrading to larger hard drives. The process of drive cloning can replicate the source drive on destination drive in terms of both contents and structure. Thus, cloning offers a safe alternative for upgrading to new, larger hard drives.

A clone is a bootable copy of your system that can be saved on any storage media, such as CDs, DVDs, USB drives, and more. This makes it easy for you to keep your Mac drive clones at a safe location and use them in the event of a hard drive failure to get your system up and running again. The cloning approach is also helpful for people who need to test a range of software or work with malware.

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