Home :: Software :: Macintosh  

Business & Office
Business & Office Management Software
Children's Software
Communication
Education & How-To
Games
Graphics
Home & Hobbies
Networking
Operating Systems & Utilities
Programming
Video & Music
Web Development
Retrospect Express 5.0

Retrospect Express 5.0

List Price: $79.00
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Has not improved
Review: Five(?) years ago I owned a very early version of this product which I used on a Mac PowerBook. Then I found it difficult to set up and use with almost incomprehensible instructions. I recently bought a new PowerBook and my current easy to use back up program (Copy Agent will not work OS X. (Although I am considering dumping OS X too - but that's another story) I thought I would try Retrospect Express to back up to Zip 250 discs. Well, the program has not improved and has proven as inscrutable to use as the first time. I spent five hours over several days trying to set it up. The user interface is not intuitive and the language used in the instructions is almost incomprehensible. And the language usage is beyond belief ... "Forget" instead of "Delete?" Give me a break. My hat is off to those who have mastered this backward looking program.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Might as well be written in Greek
Review: I agree with the reviewer from Charlottesville that "the prompts and messages seem to be written by someone for whom english is a very second or third language", and the PDF file documentation is no better. I find it extremely irritating that simple step by step flow charts for executing the various back-up features are not used. Come on Retrospect,how about some straitforward explantions on using this program. And please, take some lessons from the people who wrote the documentation for the Tech Tool Pro
Utility program -now they know how to write documentation in
clearly defined steps.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Frustrating
Review: I bought this a year ago to back up my home Mac. Here's my primary complaints :

1. It's "compression" often makes files larger than the original, especially with compressed file formats (mp3s, jpegs, etc). You can turn off compression for a whole backup set, but not for individual directories.
2. It is not easy to use to back up portions of your system. I have 180 GB of hard drive space, but much of that is scratch space for digital work that I don't want backed up (iMovie directories are especially huge). So I only select individual directories to backup. Retrospect is not very helpful at sorting out these directories while Apple's Backup does some work for you (just check a box for Address Book, and Backup gets the right files).
3. I use a standard Pioneer DVR-104 Superdrive. Of a catalog of 14 CD-R's, Retrospect makes 6 coasters. Thats an almost 50% failure rate. With these exact same disks burned from the Finder, I have burned 100+ CD-R with zero failures. Retrospect's drivers are horrible.
4. Catalog failures. I get them all the time. And they never repair themselves. Start from scratch with a new backup set.
5. Cost! I figured Retrospect was a bargain at first: Apple's Backup would be [$$$], and I needed none of the other services from .Mac. But Retrospect has already released a tiny point upgrade to 5.1 that would cost me an upgrade fee. Nope, sorry, that was the last straw.

I switched to Apple's Backup recently and have been much happier. It does not do incremental backups like Retrospect, but who cares, at least it works. I can get most of my important stuff on a single DVD-R with Backup, so its not that big of a deal.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Frustrating
Review: I bought this a year ago to back up my home Mac. Here's my primary complaints :

1. It's "compression" often makes files larger than the original, especially with compressed file formats (mp3s, jpegs, etc). You can turn off compression for a whole backup set, but not for individual directories.
2. It is not easy to use to back up portions of your system. I have 180 GB of hard drive space, but much of that is scratch space for digital work that I don't want backed up (iMovie directories are especially huge). So I only select individual directories to backup. Retrospect is not very helpful at sorting out these directories while Apple's Backup does some work for you (just check a box for Address Book, and Backup gets the right files).
3. I use a standard Pioneer DVR-104 Superdrive. Of a catalog of 14 CD-R's, Retrospect makes 6 coasters. Thats an almost 50% failure rate. With these exact same disks burned from the Finder, I have burned 100+ CD-R with zero failures. Retrospect's drivers are horrible.
4. Catalog failures. I get them all the time. And they never repair themselves. Start from scratch with a new backup set.
5. Cost! I figured Retrospect was a bargain at first: Apple's Backup would be [$$$], and I needed none of the other services from .Mac. But Retrospect has already released a tiny point upgrade to 5.1 that would cost me an upgrade fee. Nope, sorry, that was the last straw.

I switched to Apple's Backup recently and have been much happier. It does not do incremental backups like Retrospect, but who cares, at least it works. I can get most of my important stuff on a single DVD-R with Backup, so its not that big of a deal.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Not a one star product
Review: I feel the need to up the average of this software because it deserves more than one star. I was puzzled by the other reviewer's one star rant. I visited ... and noticed that many magazines and websites have given this program very high reviews. My favorite mag, Mac Addict, gave it 4/5 stars and an editor's choice recommendation.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Too bad it is the only game in town
Review: I have about 15 years experience programming for the PC and the Mac. I bought this product basically because there did not seem to be much else on the market. I would describe it as odd, and somewhat useless.

I tried to back up 10 gb of data from my Powerbook hard drive to a firewire external disk. After some odd displays of counting over 100,000 files on my hard drive (there are actually less than 8,000) it announced that it could not deal with over 2 gb of data. That might have been ok in 1993, but not now.

Then I tried the duplicate function. Again it counts zillions of non-existent files, then runs for 12 hours, then announces that it quits for unknown reasons after doing about 3 gb of data. I have tried this 6 times now and no joy.

So I have had this product about a month and it has yet to be able to backup 10 gb of data.

Two other comments: first, the prompts and messages seem to be written by someone for whom english is a very second or third language, and by someone who is utterly unfamiliar with the Apple style book. Second, as far as I can tell, it has no smart backup feature, where you can ask it to back up just files that have been touched since the last back up.

All in all, I recommend that you pass on this product and write your own back up script.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Too bad it is the only game in town
Review: I have about 15 years experience programming for the PC and the Mac. I bought this product basically because there did not seem to be much else on the market. I would describe it as odd, and somewhat useless.

I tried to back up 10 gb of data from my Powerbook hard drive to a firewire external disk. After some odd displays of counting over 100,000 files on my hard drive (there are actually less than 8,000) it announced that it could not deal with over 2 gb of data. That might have been ok in 1993, but not now.

Then I tried the duplicate function. Again it counts zillions of non-existent files, then runs for 12 hours, then announces that it quits for unknown reasons after doing about 3 gb of data. I have tried this 6 times now and no joy.

So I have had this product about a month and it has yet to be able to backup 10 gb of data.

Two other comments: first, the prompts and messages seem to be written by someone for whom english is a very second or third language, and by someone who is utterly unfamiliar with the Apple style book. Second, as far as I can tell, it has no smart backup feature, where you can ask it to back up just files that have been touched since the last back up.

All in all, I recommend that you pass on this product and write your own back up script.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Retro express is childs play for hard drive backup
Review: I use retrospect express 5.x to back up a firewire, desktop 60 GB Western Digital attached to a G4 Apple. RE 5.X cannot be more simple to install and use. I have set it to do auto backups once a week. Peace of mind is mine forever. Get yours soon!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Retro express is childs play for hard drive backup
Review: I use retrospect express 5.x to back up a firewire, desktop 60 GB Western Digital attached to a G4 Apple. RE 5.X cannot be more simple to install and use. I have set it to do auto backups once a week. Peace of mind is mine forever. Get yours soon!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: I hate it!
Review: I'm an experience Macintosh user, and have used an earlier full version of Retrospect at work to back up 40 Macs on our network. I bought Retrospect Express 5.0 to back up my iMac at home. First there were problems installing this software, then it fought me every step of the way with its inscrutible instructions, long wait times, and failures. I give up. Don't buy this junk. I just wasted $...!


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates