BackedUp and NotBackedUp
About four years ago, one of the partners that I was working on an engagement with commented on how developers tend to have their own unique way of managing files, but that mine was one of the most bizarre he had ever seen. It has been four years, but I believe the statement Ted made was something along the lines of
"…and Jeremy puts all his files in only two folders"
Well, truth be told, Ted was right -- and he would still be right if he repeated the statement today.
On all of my various laptops, desktops, and servers, you will find that the only folders in the root of any drive are the ones created by Windows (such as Documents and Settings, Inetpub, Program Files, and Windows) as well as the two that I create:
BackedUp
NotBackedUp
I tend to put files that I create -- or contribute to -- in the BackedUp folder. Everything else I put in the NotBackedUp folder. Why, you may ask, do I use this apparently over-simplistic system?
I attribute the reasoning to several factors:
- I download a lot of stuff (i.e. gigabytes) , much of which I need to access frequently -- regardless of which particular computer I happen to be working on at any particular moment
- If I were to lose any of the files that I create -- or contribute to -- it could require several days (or actually several late nights) to recreate the material; some of the documents that I have created have several man-weeks invested in them -- I dread the mere thought of losing one of those
- Long before the user experience improvements in Windows Vista, I needed "instant access" to my frequently used files (in fact, I still need these shortcuts whenever I am logged into a computer or VM running Windows Server 2003)
- I typically "rebuild" my laptop once a year either to install a new OS (such as last November when Vista was released) or to clean out all the old garbage that, being a developer, I tend to install for one reason or another
Factor #1 is addressed by creating various folders under NotBackedUp and storing the gigabytes of stuff that I have managed to download over the last 8 years in various folders underneath:
\NotBackedUp\Builds
...
\NotBackedUp\Public\Download
\NotBackedUp\Public\Toolbox
...
\NotBackedUp\Temp
\NotBackedUp\VMs
Factor #2 is addressed by redirecting the "My Documents" folder to
\BackedUp\jjameson\Documents
...and then setting up a simple batch file to copy everything in the BackedUp folder to one of my home servers:
robocopy C:\BackedUp \\beast\Backups\jjameson1\BackedUp /E
Factor #3 is simply a matter of creating two shortcuts on my taskbar:
Figure 1 - Taskbar Shortcuts
Factor #4 (rebuilding my laptop) certainly isn't a quick ordeal (it typically takes about 4 hours, by the time I install the OS, SQL Server, Visual Studio, copy my gigabytes worth of downloads back from the server, etc.) but at least I don't have to worry about accidentally losing any of my files. I just do a quick robocopy of the BackedUp and NotBackedUp folders to one of my home servers, pop in the Windows installation CD, and format my partition.
By limiting the number of places that I store files, I dramatically simplify the management of my files.
I'd like to tell you that the concept of BackedUp and NotBackedUp was something that I came up with, but actually it's something I picked up from a Unix sysadmin by the name of Gary Rittenhouse, who I used to work with at AT&T Bell Laboratories. [Gary, you'll probably never see this post, but if you do, thanks for all of the great tips and tricks you provided me in those early days.]
Comments
Anonymous
June 23, 2007
This is a little embarrassing, but I captured numerous screenshots back in April while rebuilding myAnonymous
June 23, 2007
Over the years, I have refined how I create Visual Studio projects based on lessons learned and new capabilitiesAnonymous
March 24, 2009
Last summer, I added DiffMerge to my Toolbox and I haven't used WinDiff since. DiffMerge can do everythingAnonymous
March 26, 2009
I was digging through my blog dashboard this morning and I came across this post that I started backAnonymous
March 26, 2009
Since my previous post introduced one of my SharePoint Toolbox scripts, I thought I should share anotherAnonymous
March 30, 2009
If you develop solutions for Microsoft Office SharePoint Server (MOSS) 2007, you may notice that certainAnonymous
April 08, 2009
My two folders are PROJECTS and SOFTWARE :)