Rating: 6/6
For Those Who Don't Own Version 9, a Few Improvements Should Put This at the Top of Your Shopping List
Acronis True Image 9 has been a permanent fixture on the A List since it won our backup Labs a year ago (April 2006). There's no immediate visual difference in this version compared to the last, and the changes under the hood are fairly minimal too thankfully, however, they're all very worthwhile. Acronis has clearly listened to feedback and tweaked the user interface to focus on the options most people will need.
Realising tasks such as cloning disks and manipulating images are seldom used by less experienced users, they've been relegated to the side menu. The latter tasks have also been renamed: you now "mount" rather than "plug" an image.
In their place, we get more sensible everyday choices. The left-hand menu has been expanded to include common options, complete with a separate Help panel. The active backup tasks now have their own pane, along with all the tools for creating, running and editing them. Scheduling also occurs here, with options for daily, weekly, monthly or one-off backups. It can also be set to run at logon, logoff, startup or shutdown, and this can be refined to once a day for PCs with multiple users.
Backing up directly to an FTP server is now a useful option, as is application integration. While Acronis True Image 10 hasn't achieved the Holy Grail of saving entire programs, it will store all your personal settings from a hefty list of applications in 14 wide-ranging categories. Outlook and Outlook Express are dealt with separately from the rest; it will save your archives, personal folders and user settings, as well as your Windows Address Book if you have one.
Acronis has caught up with the consumer-focused competition by making it simple to select all your music, videos and pictures for quick backup. Finally, you also have the standard option of choosing individual files and folders or just imaging the entire drive for the ultimate in data protection a feature that still isn't universal among standalone backup utilities.
All the rest is still present from version 9, so if you're familiar with the ins and outs you'll have no difficulty adapting. The Acronis Secure Zone caters for PCs with no external storage by partitioning off a portion of your hard disk, which is isolated from the rest to guard against viruses and other malware. It won't protect you against physical disk failure, but it's a useful way of backing up on a budget.
The Acronis Active Restore feature can amazingly get you back up and running in seconds after a disaster by immediately loading the essentials, while the rest of the system is gradually restored in the background. Plus, the Acronis Recovery Manager can be accessed without bootable media once it's been enabled in Windows, so you don't have the headache of keeping track of recovery discs. Differential and incremental backups are available to suit your needs, and Acronis will automatically manage the size and distribution of the backup sets based on the disk space rules you set.
Its weaknesses are few, but some still exist: the basic password protection isn't up to the advanced encryption of most of its rivals, and you'll still need third-party burning software to back up to DVD, although plummeting hard disk prices are rendering that less of an issue. It's also very much a personal product; if you have more than one PC to back up you may be better suited to the Enterprise or Server editions of Acronis True Image.
Acronis True Image 10 is a fairly minor reworking of the previous version, so if you already own that the value in upgrading is debatable, despite the low price.
The other reason to upgrade would be Windows Vista compatibility version 9 won't work. But for anyone yet to take a step towards backing up, there's just nothing else that comes close to matching it for power, speed and its do-it-all nature. Acronis True Image 10 offers extensive options plus the ability to image your entire PC, and this powerful combination puts it head and shoulders above the competition.
About Acronis:
Acronis is a global cyber protection company that provides natively integrated cybersecurity, data protection, and endpoint management for managed service providers (MSPs), small and medium businesses (SMBs), and enterprise IT departments. Acronis solutions are highly efficient and designed to identify, prevent, detect, respond, remediate, and recover from modern cyberthreats with minimal downtime, ensuring data integrity and business continuity. Acronis offers the most comprehensive security solution on the market for MSPs with its unique ability to meet the needs of diverse and distributed IT environments.
A Swiss company founded in Singapore in 2003, Acronis has 15 offices worldwide and employees in 50+ countries. Acronis Cyber Protect is available in 26 languages in 150 countries and is used by over 20,000 service providers to protect over 750,000 businesses. Learn more at www.acronis.com.