Does anyone else use Zotero to backup and sync their private documents?
For a long time I only used Zotero to store and archive unchanging bibliographic sources. Then one day it occurred to me that I could use it to store the manuscript that I am writing while I'm writing it.
I made a new blank item and attached my manuscript. At the end of the day I close my documents, sync, go home, and sync again. Zotero automatically backs up my work to the webDAV server and then to my home computer, and I can casually keep working at home, then sync before I go back to work. I now do this with all running documents that I'm working on - I used to email them to myself.
I was going to recommend the same procedure to someone who has two offices that he works in on different days, so that he would be able to keep working seamlessly regardless of where he is. But I'm not sure if Zotero is meant to act as a file backup system. It doesn't have versioning, for one thing, plus sync could go the wrong way if there was an error.
Of course there are other programs that handle sync and backup, but does anyone just lean on Zotero like I do?
I made a new blank item and attached my manuscript. At the end of the day I close my documents, sync, go home, and sync again. Zotero automatically backs up my work to the webDAV server and then to my home computer, and I can casually keep working at home, then sync before I go back to work. I now do this with all running documents that I'm working on - I used to email them to myself.
I was going to recommend the same procedure to someone who has two offices that he works in on different days, so that he would be able to keep working seamlessly regardless of where he is. But I'm not sure if Zotero is meant to act as a file backup system. It doesn't have versioning, for one thing, plus sync could go the wrong way if there was an error.
Of course there are other programs that handle sync and backup, but does anyone just lean on Zotero like I do?
This is an old discussion that has not been active in a long time. Before commenting here, you should strongly consider starting a new discussion instead. If you think the content of this discussion is still relevant, you can link to it from your new discussion.
I personally use DropBox for what you describe. The advantage in that is that it stores also version history, which is one of the key advantage of having regular backups. With DropBox, you can also access the files over web.
However, I can't use DropBox here in China, so that's out for me. I do enjoy being able to back up my manuscripts, notes, homework assignments and all my sources with one click.
Alternatively, you could in addition back-up locally onto an external hard drive with a program that has version history.