Moving a drive from one computer to another has the advantage of speed: backups will proceed much more quickly than they would over a network. However, it goes without saying that each computer can add files to its backup only with the drive attached to it.
The other approach is to leave the drive connected to one of your Macs, share it using Personal File Sharing, and connect to it over the network either a wired Ethernet network or a wireless AirPort network that includes your other computers. For starters, network backups are generally much slower than backups directly to FireWire or USB drives.
Likewise, backups over AirPort networks are slower than backups over Ethernet, and the older AirPort protocols According to this post on Apple's product page for the Time Capsule, up to machines can use a single Time Capsule.
The source of the "" is not accredited, so it may not be accurate. Each backup gets stored in different directories inside the volume. I would take care with having several Time Capsules as you will then have several Wireless networks and you need to work out how they interconnect.
Netgear or even a Mac and run OS X server on that. I don't know if there is an upper limit. This is a very workable solution. There is no built in limit and you can look over the system logs to see if any machines take too long to back up due to slowness and lighten the load on any one Time Capsule as needed.
You can use BackupLoupe to look into the individual backups to see what files are changing and estimate how fast each Mac is filling up the space on the backup drives. You could use one Mac connected to the Ethernet port to scan the files without any WiFi delays and once scanned, you have the information on that Mac to examine "offline".
You can mount the volumes and scan them as needed to update them as time passes - maybe once a month to check on things. Do run a comparison on how much it would cost to buy a Mac mini server and use it to back up everything in one spot instead of several Time Capsules. You could then save money on the networking with Extremes and Expresses and have better expansion options. Setting aside the cost of the initial hardware, a back of the napkin comparison might look like this assuming you need the TC for WiFi networking as well as backup functionality:.
You can minimize the work on maintaining a fleet of Time Capsules by periodically backing up each Mac to a connected HD and then deleting the backup for that Mac and starting Time Machine fresh. I recommend you get two Time Capsules so you have two separate backups just to be safe. Select one drive and then click it again to add the second drive.
Make sure automatic backups is turned on and you are done. Aug 2, PM. Page content loaded. Have multiple Mac computers in your home or office? AirPort Time Capsule can back up and store files for each Mac on your wireless network. No longer do you have to attach an external drive to each Mac every time you want to back up. AirPort Time Capsule spares you the work. Your computers are always backed up — automatically and wirelessly.
Jul 31, PM.
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