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Package contents, Definitions – Clickfree Backup Drive User Manual

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Clickfree Backup Drive for Macintosh: User Guide

Introducing Clickfree Backup Drive

P

ACKAGE CONTENTS

Your

Clickfree

backup package contains:

• one

Clickfree

Backup Drive

• one USB cable to attach the Backup Drive to your computer
• one quick start guide

D

EFINITIONS

Just to make sure that the user guide is clear, we’re going to define a couple of terms that
are used throughout the guide.

Back up and Restore

Backing up is making copies of data so that a copy can be used to restore the original after
the data is lost or destroyed. Backups are used to restore data after loss of or damage to
your computer’s hard disk, and to restore files that have been accidentally deleted or
corrupted.

Making a backup of your content only copies it from your computer to your Backup Drive,
and does not delete it from the computer’s hard disk.

Restoring your content from a backup only copies it from your Backup Drive to your
computer, and does not delete it from the Backup Drive.

Important:

Clickfree

never erases or replaces content on your computer’s hard disk, unless

you ask it to replace a file during restore.

Clickfree

never erases anything other than the backups it has performed. Any

other data stored on your Backup Drive is left untouched and is never erased

The only exception to this is if you previously used your Backup Drive with a non-Mac
computer and saved files on it outside of

Clickfree

backups. Because you will need to

reformat the Backup Drive for use with the Mac, all data on the disk will be lost. Be sure to
copy valuable content before reformatting.


And unless you ask it to remove backed-up content,

Clickfree

never erases or

replaces content on your Backup Drive.

Your

Clickfree

backups are also handy for moving or copying data from one computer to

another.

Content

Normally you don’t use

Clickfree

to back up your applications or operating system, only

the data that you have created or copied to your computer – music, photos, letters, emails
etc. In this guide we refer to this data as content.

File

Information used by your computer and stored in a specific place on your hard disk. A file
may be content, an application or part of an application, or information a program uses in
some way.

Copyright © 2009 Storage Appliance Corporation.

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