Right-click a backup file, select True Image > Mount and it’ll be mounted as a virtual drive within Explorer, leaving you free to access whatever files you need. Navigate your backup folders with the ugly-but-functional browser, checking boxes next to the files and folders to restore, and set the program to recover them all with a click.Īlternatively, while there is no “mount” command within True Image 2015 any more (that’s been ditched as well), Explorer integration has the same effect. Select a job, click "Recover Files", and choose the time of the backup you’d like to use. Restoring a backup works essentially as you’d expect. What you can’t see immediately is when the last backup took place, but that time - and the total backup size - is displayed when you select an individual job.
Once it’s set up and running, the program works very well.Ĭlick the Backup button and True Image 2015 lists each of your backups, with its name (by default the source), destination, and a status indicator to let you know what happened last time (hopefully a green tick, which means it ran without problems). Acronis says a new deduplication scheme further improves online backup performance by an average of 10%, and the flexible scheduler worked as advertised for each of our tests. That’s more "dumbing down" than simplifying.įortunately the backup process itself proved speedy and reliable. More seriously, backup logs are now only available if you create a “system report” (or use email notifications), an annoyingly lengthy process which not even an expert would necessarily figure out, and isn’t clearly referenced in the help. That wasn’t close to being accurate until 18 minutes in, and the entire backup only took 43 minutes. It took 8 minutes for us to be given a "time remaining" figure during one test, for example. We noticed some small issues during backup, too. What you don't get is any direct option to choose backup files by type – music, pictures, documents, whatever - which could be a complication for the novice user. There’s control over backup encryption, splitting and validation, optional pre- and post-backup commands, email notifications, and a capable scheduler to run backup jobs at precisely the right moment.
Custom exclusion filters help to ensure you only back up what you need. You can run full, incremental or differential backups, with your choice of backup schemes. There's plenty of power hidden behind the “Options” button, of course. Even brand new users will figure it out in seconds. Choose a destination, and that’s enough: you can launch your backup with one more click. Clicking Select Source and choosing the new “Entire PC” option selects all your drives for you. To create your first backup, for instance, you’d click Backup > Add Backup > Create New Backup. It’s all very much simplified, and that pays off in some ways.
True Image 2015 looks very different to the previous release, with touch-friendly flat icons organising its features into six areas: Backup (and recovery), Sync, Tools, Account (online backup), License and Help. If you are going to do system disk cloning, it recommended to do it from Acronis Bootable Media.But Acronis True Image 2015 tries to reverse that trend with a back-to-basics approach, ditching many of the extras, focusing on the core essentials, and wrapping everything up in a stripped-back, simplified interface. Please clone to internal SATA SSD or HDD instead.
Windows does not support booting from external USB hard drives. (!) If you clone a disk with Windows to external USB hard drive, you will not be able to boot from it. It is possible to clone a larger disk to a smaller one, provided that the smaller hard disk has enough capacity to fit the contents of the larger disk. It is recommended not to format the source hard disk after the cloning until you are sure that the cloned target disk boots fine. Source disk volumes can be cloned to the target disk "as is" or resized proportionally. (!) If you are planning to clone a disk from your laptop, please see Cloning Laptop Hard Disk. (!) See also Acronis True Image Does Not Clone Drives with Different Logic Sector Sizes. As a workaround, you can create a backup of the source dynamic disk and restore it to the new disk using Acronis True Image 2014 Premium. (!) Acronis True Image 2014 Premium does not allow to clone dynamic disks as well. If it shows Dynamic, then cloning is not possible:.If it shows Basic, then you can do the cloning.You can use Windows Disk Management to see if you have basic or dynamic disks: