Acronis says True Image 2019 provides set and forget protection. Going by my experience with the 2018 version, I can verify this. The last time I checked the older edition
of the software was in May. I know this date is correct because that's when I swapped to a new iMac.
It has backed up my iMac to the cloud for four months without any attention.
Now I'm using the 2019 version. It's installed and it's working. Every evening it updates some 200 GB plus sending it to
Acronis' cloud for safe keeping.
The process is so unobtrusive and the upgrade from True Image 2018 was so seamless that it's hard to see any difference between the two versions.
True Image 2019 differencesThat doesn't mean there isn't a difference. The main new feature in the Mac version is Active disc cloning. You can use it to move data from one computer to another, or to make a bootable image on an external hard drive.
The external drive needs to connect directly to the computer being cloned. I couldn't clone my Mac drive to the home
network drive. You can only copy the entire drive. There's no way to select directories for cloning.
Acronis' other new 2019 feature is call a Survival Kit. This is like Active disc cloning, you can use it to make a bootable back up of your start-up partition.
In truth these are both variations on Acronis True Image's main theme, although they give you more back-up options.
Auto-start on connectAnother clever, helpful update is that you can set the software to start backing-up when a new external USB drive is
plugged-in. It's another step towards simplifying backing-up. Let's face it, the easier it is to make back-ups, the more
likely you are to keep everything up-to-date.
The last interesting update in True Image 2019 is that you can now make snapshots of Parallels Desktop virtual machines.
It's a niche feature for sure, but a welcome one.
My year with Acronis True Image 2018 passed without incident. During that time I switched computers twice and carried on
backing up. I did a single restore from the Acronis Cloud to a computer, but it was a test, not a real panic recovery.
It's a solid alternative offering both a secure cloud backup and the ability to make local backups at the same time.
PricesAcronis may seem expensive when compared with other apps, but it costs are on a par with other cloud backup services. You can pay US$50 to buy the software for a single computer. It's a one time payment and lasts forever, but it doesn't
include cloud storage.
A single year licence with 250GB of cloud storage is also US$50. This rises to US$100 if you want to connect five
computers. A three computer option is US$80.
The full monty premium version comes with a terabyte of cloud storage. This is the only version that includes blockchain
certification. Acronis fingerprints your files to show no-one else has altered them. This is a way to protect against
ransomware. The premium version costs US$100 a year for one machine and US$150 for five.
Acronis True Image 2019 review: Serious backup updated was first posted at billbennett.co.nz.