Backup System For 5 PC SMB
-
@BRRABill said:
Like say I backed up an OEM machine, and wanted to BMR it to a new machine. This will not activate. Now, I can call Microsoft and they may or may not give me a new activation key, but regardless, this is NOT a valid use of the original OEM license. The new machine needs its own license.
So to go over the licensing for this scenario (which we covered offline but to recap for those that did not see that conversation...)
You need three licenses to enable this:
- The OEM License for the original install (should come with the purchase of the old desktop)
- The OEM License for the new install (should come with the purchase of the desktop)
- Volume License Imaging Rights
With those three things together you should be able to do a BMR restore. Each place is licensed and the ability to use the old system image on the new hardware is covered.
-
Here is the Datto Alto which is one of the products in this category.
-
I brought this up at another point, but it potentially applies here, too. Jentu's technology might work here for allowing backups with testing where you could take a backup and actually test it on the same hardware via Jentu without needing a VM anywhere. Not their intended use case, but it should work just fine.
-
Taggin @JentuTechnologies for that. They might have some insight.
-
@scottalanmiller said in Backup System For 5 PC SMB:
Taggin @JentuTechnologies for that. They might have some insight.
Ha, guess they didn't
-
Just stumbled on this and posted a separate thread but it fits in this one too: https://www.vembu.com/endpoint-backup-free/
-
I think the final takeaway, especially for non-IT folk, is to move away from a system that requires this sort of backup.
-
@BRRABill said in Backup System For 5 PC SMB:
I think the final takeaway, especially for non-IT folk, is to move away from a system that requires this sort of backup.
Ideally, of course.
-
@StrongBad said in Backup System For 5 PC SMB:
@BRRABill said in Backup System For 5 PC SMB:
I think the final takeaway, especially for non-IT folk, is to move away from a system that requires this sort of backup.
Ideally, of course.
The age old answer ... "depends"