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It’s currently pouring rain here in Massachusetts, and with the lightning storms we’ve had the last few days, I think it’s a sign to remind folks about making backups.
First, the big one, Desktop Club Accounting:
- To manually make a backup, go in to the File menu, and select Export.
- From the window that comes up, click Browse, and pick a location for your backup file. Now, it’s your computer, and you can put the file anywhere you want, but I strongly suggest making the backup to a portable drive. If you don’t have one of these already, it’s a good time to get one. I found one a couple of weeks ago for a little over 9.00, with enough space to hold a few thousand backup files; unless you’re making a new backup every day, one of these drives could last you a long, long time.
- If you want, you can also have the program remind you about making a backup each time it closes. Go into the Tools menu, and select Settings. From there, put a check mark in ‘Show backup warning on exit’; click OK, and every time you close Club Accounting, it’ll ask you to make a backup. As long as you have that extra drive plugged in, you only need to select it once; after that, the program will always try to go back to the last place you made a backup.
Next up, Toolkit:
Some of this I’ve written about in other notes, specifically in Support Ticket 7, 7.5 and a little bit in Support ticket 12, so this is going to be a little bit of a light touch on the topic. I would suggest taking a look at 7, and 7.5 in particular.
- Open Toolkit and click on Options > Database Utilities.
- Select the first option, to make a backup of your database
- Select C:: -Fixed from the drop-down menu, and click OK.
- From the list of places, select the drive that you want to make the backup to. If you are using a removable drive, and aren't sure which letter it is, unplug the drive for a few seconds, and then plug it back in. When unplugged, one of the listed drives should disappear after a few seconds, and then re-appear when the drive is plugged back in.
- Click OK
- Toolkit should report that the database was backed up. Click OK
- You can now remove the drive or floppy disk from the computer.
Now the myiclub.com web site makes its own backups, so it’s not technically necessary to make a separate backup, but because of this, I think there are a fair number of clubs that don’t make use of it when it can be really useful to do so.
- From the main accounting page, click the Utilities heading in the left hand column.
- On the Utilities page, you have two options, Export, and Backup Manager. Export works very similar to the Export option in the desktop Club Accounting; you click a Browse button, and select a spot on your computer. Since this is online accounting though, I want to take a look at the Backup Manager.
- The first time you go into the Backup Manager, it’s going to look sparse; there’s a Make Backup button, and not too much else. Go ahead and click the button if you haven’t already, and in a few seconds you’ll see the screen refresh with a line showing the name of the club, and the current date. To the right of this is a small Recover button. If you click this, the system will undo any changes you’ve made since that backup.
- You can make as many backups here as you want, and each one will be kept separate, and will only be removed if you put a check mark in the box next to a listed backup, and then click the Delete button.
What I usually tell folks is to use this if they’re about to try a transaction they’ve never entered before, or if they’re going to be working through auditing some of the records. If you make a backup here, it’s a great safety net; if you get to a point where things just don’t look right, you can always return to that backup you made before you got started.
Last up for today is Stock Analyst
- In Stock Analyst, go to Options menu, and select Backup Database.
- As with the Club Accounting program, you can save the file anywhere you like, but I’m going to assume if you’ve read this far, that there’s a portable drive plugged into the computer by now, so first thing, select, Computer
- From there, double-click on the portable drive. As with Toolkit, if you aren’t sure which drive it is, unplug the drive for a moment, and then plug it back in; the drive that disappears, and then re-appears will be the one you’re looking for.
- Click the Save button.
- Click OK when the backup is complete.
And that’s all for now. The rain has died down a bit here, but I hope you’re able to make use of these steps the next time you find yourself on a rainy day, not able to remember the last time you made a backup of your important information.
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