2011 (Windows)

Table Of Contents
However, you can associate unique names with each drive when you use them
with Symantec System Recovery. The unique name that is associated with a drive
is displayed in various locations in Symantec System Recovery.
Note: Placing physical labels on each external drive to help you manage the task
of swapping the drives is also a good idea.
For example, if you assigned the unique name, "Cathy Read" to one drive, and
"Thomas Read" to a second drive. Their unique names appear in Symantec System
Recovery whenever the drives are plugged in to your computer.
See
About Offsite Copy on page 100.
To make it even easier, the Options dialog box lets you see all of your drive unique
names in one view. From this view, you can remove or edit existing names.
See Removing or changing the unique name for an external drive on page 54.
Removing or changing the unique name for an external drive
You can remove or change the unique name for the drive as needed.
Note: Symantec System Recovery lets you assign a unique name when you plug
in an external drive in to your computer for the first time.
To remove or change unique name for an external drive
1
On the Tasks menu, click Options.
2
Under Destinations, click External Drives.
3
Select an external drive from the list and then do one of the following:
Click Remove to delete the unique name that is associated with the
external drive.
Click Rename to edit the unique name.
4
Click OK.
See
About using unique names for external drives on page 53.
Configuring default FTP settings for use with Offsite Copy
File transfer protocol , or FTP, is the simplest and most secure way to copy files
over the Internet. Symantec System Recovery serves as an FTP client to copy your
recovery points to a remote FTP server. You can copy your recovery points to an
FTP server as a secondary backup of your critical data.
Getting Started
Configuring Symantec System Recovery default options
54