annanc14 wrote:
I'm getting messages saying that my Airport Time Capsule is no longer a recommended disk for backups with Time Machine.
Time Machine backups have been really useful and I don't want to back up to an external USB disk for safety reasons. Are Apple going to replace Airport Time Capsules with some new option?
I'd like to back up using wifi and keep doing it with Time Machine. It was very convenient.
From what Apple says about Time Machine Backup
If you have a USB drive or other external storage device, you can use Time Machine to automatically back up your files, including apps, music, photos, email, and documents.
Much like , not the same as, the other contributor
Security issues ?
Encrypt your backup disk
To truly protect your non replaceable Data
Have a 3-2-1 Rescue Plan in place and always current
3 Backups using 2 methods and 1 off site incase of natural disaster or un-natural disaster.
Each of the above should be done to a Dedicated Single Purposed External Drive
Below link is intended to augment what TM Backup does
https://bombich.com
Backing up to Network Attached Storage (NAS)
The convenience of a wireless backup to a NAS device is appealing. Based on user feedback, however, we discourage people from relying on NAS devices for their primary backup for several reasons:
- Write performance to a NAS device is typically, at best, comparable to writing to a USB 2.0 HDD
- Performance of a NAS accessed via WiFi can be 10-100 times slower than the average locally-attached hard drive.
- Periodically validating the integrity of data on a NAS device may be impractical due to network performance.
- WiFi backups are only as reliable as the network connection and macOS's network filesystem client.
- Filesystem transactions on a network filesystem incur a lot more overhead than filesystem transactions on a locally-attached filesystem, leading to very long backup windows when your data set has lots of files (e.g. > 250K files).
For primary backups, we recommend that you procure a USB or Thunderbolt hard drive and create a backup on that locally-attached disk.