Subject | Re: Paintshop and Corel |
From | Tony Cooper |
Date | 11/25/2013 04:22 (11/24/2013 22:22) |
Message-ID | <h2g599troeb8154mnmq9qtpcl71r58uvnh@4ax.com> |
Client | |
Newsgroups | rec.photo.digital |
Follows | nospam |
Followups | nospam (1h & 11m) > Tony Cooper |
nospamNo, you use to mean something you *think*, or hope, "most" people do. Usually, it's something favorable about Apple.
In article <1s4599pp9srqdhg0nn8o7s85j1ua7a2psm@4ax.com>, Tony Cooper <tonycooper214@gmail.com>wrote:nospamTony CoopernospamTony Coopernospam
But, with the availability of relatively inexpensive multi-terrabyte external drives, getting all your files on one drive is not difficult. With all your files on one drive, you can back up all files at one time. Backing up the drives is the most protective action you can take.
backing up more than one drive can also be done at one time.you must be doing it the hard way, manually, which does not surprise me in the least.Tony Cooper
You don't read the full text before making one of your idiotic statements? It's not me doing anything in this post.
if i had said most, you'd be going on about how i can't possibly know what most people want, how did i do my survey, why am i forcing my ways on everyone else, and all the other nonsensical bullshit you spew.
No, when you talk about "most people", you use it to describe more specific things.
i use it to describe what it says, most people.Tony Coopernospam
"Most" is quite acceptable when it is used to describe what we all know is done by most people.
exactly how i use the term.
Then who is "we"?Tony Coopernospam
Who's "we"? You have no idea what anyone else thinks about my posts.
i never said i did.
you are using the very phrase that you criticize me for using, which makes you a hypocrite. very simple.Sure it is. A "protocol" is just a fancy word for a "plan".nospamTony CoopernospamTony CooperTony Coopernospam
I know you can set a back-up protocol to back up multiple drives, but the one-drive system works for most people.
what you don't know is that backups can be automated and the number of drives makes no difference. the computer doesn't care if it's one or 15 drives.
What do you think a "back-up protocol" is?
i've never heard it called that.
Oh, I see. Which part is new to you? "Back-up"? You know what is entailed in backing-up files? Do I need to explain this?
A "protocol" is a system that is followed to do something. A protocol is established in order to do the same thing the same way every time we do it. A protocol also establishes when we do it.
So, a "back-up protocol" is a system devised by the user that tells him when to back-up the files, where to back-up the files to, and anything else routinely done in the back-up process.
In Lightroom, the user establishes the back-up protocol for the LR files (not the actual image files) under "Catalog Settings". The user chooses how often to back-up and where the back-up goes.
It's not a term I invented. It's a common term, and Google will provide many articles on back-up protocol.
actually it doesn't.
what it gives for the phrase is not what you meant when you said it.
as usual you don't understand what you're talking about.I don't know what your problem is in understanding what stares you in the face. I Googled "back-up protocol" and this is the third hit on the page: