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DESCRIPTION
QRecall is the next generation in backup and document archiving. Space efficient and easy to use. Drag and drop backups and restores. Effortless browsing lets you see, and rewind, the history of captured items. Schedule actions to automate backups and maintenance. See more features.
WHAT'S NEW
Version 1.1.3:
  • A small number of changes and workarounds to keep QRecall running smoothly under Mac OS X 10.6.
REQUIREMENTS
Mac OS X 10.4.9 or later.

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SCREENSHOT

Developer:Dawn to Dusk Software
Downloads:6,328
  - Version d/l:511
Utilities:Backup
License:Demo
Date:27 Aug 2009
Platform:PPC/Intel
Price:$40.00
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QRecall User Reviews (2 posts)Write A Review
sort: smiles | time
Dec 5 2008
*****

HAMDI  Top-Class Software,

I've been using QRecall for two months and am extremely glad with it. It does everything I asked and scheduled it to do in a wonderfully efficient way -besides, a rarity among backup/sync applications, in a highly stylised way. I am backing up and archiving my writing work on an hourly basis and returning back to see what I've done all along. (Though I haven't tried large-scale things like system backup etc -SuperDuper seems to be reigning there). Once I had to contact the developer for a small clarification and received a quick, detailed and kind response with encouragement for more. All these things seldom come together nowadays. Well, one of the finest of all Mac applications, I believe -in league with such greats as Quicksilver, Pathfinder, Default Folder X, Ulysses and such. Highly recommended.  
(Version 1.1)

praisebury
+3
[ Reply ]
Oct 28 2007

THE MAC THERAPIST  It's a little soon to offer a complete review and rating, but so far, it's pretty terrific. I'm backing up a boot drive with 83GB and another 10 GB of miscellaneous data from a couple of external drives.

It was very intuitive to set up and configure, much more so than Retrospect, despite my long experience using that software. So far, it also appears much easier than Retrospect to modify and to retrieve items from. I haven't yet attempted to retrieve an entire bootable drive, but I'll be surprised if that isn't just as easy.

One nitpick: I'd like to see a better, more comprehensive Help file - for example, a search on "add a folder," meaning I wanted to know how to add a folder to the current backup scheme, yielded no clearly useful step by step answers. It's fine for a program to have its own terminology, but backup software, because it's usually configured when people may not be paying the most intense concentration, and restoration - when they may be panicked and not thinking clearly - all need to have clear translations in the glossary/index so that one can look them up (and the procedures associated with them) using BOTH the developer's lingo AND the likely common words inexperienced and upset users might employ from ordinary language and/or from similarly-functioning products.

Nonetheless, this is a great beginning and I'm hoping it will make backing up so easy to set up, monitor, and utilize to restore files that far more people will do so. Even the $40 price the developers anticipate once it's out of Beta is very attractive, given that it may save an enormous amount of grief whether for restoration of one critical file, or a whole drive's contents.   
(Version 1.0b47)

praisebury
+2
[ Reply ]