I just started working for a company that uses Retrospect V. 6.1.126 on a G4 Mac Desktop running OS 10.4.9 and
has multiple clients.">
Posted on May 23, 2007 8:37 AM
Mac OS X's greatest impact in retrospect may be in the role it had in inspiring and propping up iOS, which has far surpassed macOS as Apple's most widely used operating system. And indeed, macOS. I just started working for a company that uses Retrospect V. 6.1.126 on a G4 Mac Desktop running OS 10.4.9 and has multiple clients. I have never used Retrospect myself but I'm trying to find a solution to a problem with their Retro. I'm in the graphics department which consists of three Macs. Is running off one, the G4 I mentioned before. Retrospect’s Open File Backup Unlimited add-on extends to all Windows systems protected by your Retrospect host server, including end-user desktops and laptops. Retrospect Client Packs Extends the number of networked desktops and notebook computers that can be backed up using Retrospect Disk-to-Disk or Desktop editions.
Scalable Data Protection: Retrospect's protection suite now includes scalable data protection. As an industry first for
file-level backup, Retrospect is now certified to back up 1 billion files per backup set, 100 TB of data per backup set, and 50 million files per device.
Includes monitoring tools integration: Retrospect now integrates with the latest monitoring systems, including Nagios, Slack, and
IFTTT. System administrators can deploy custom scripts that populate their monitoring systems with a wide range of Retrospect events and statistics, including per-source backup
information, media requests, and script successes and failures
Script Hooks: Retrospect now includes script hooks. IT staff can integrate customized scripts
that are executed at specific points during their backup strategy lifecycle. Retrospect is now able to quiesce databases and other services before a backup starts and then relaunch those services after the backup completes successfully. Script hooks let system administrators integrate Retrospect more deeply into their environment.
Performance Improvements: Retrospect 12 for Windows and Retrospect 14 for Mac include significant improvements for backup and restore for computers that have more than 500,000 folders.
Network Connectivity: Retrospect 12 for Windows and Retrospect 14 for Mac include clients that are more resilient to network hiccups and outages.