Philip_D_Foster@adobeforums.com
02-25-2004, 01:33 PM
I maintain many large documents (user guides and manuals). I routinely add updates and need version control capability, so Version Cue looks like a great tool for this application. I need to know if Version Cue has a "fail-safe" design in the way that it archives data in between backups that minimizes lost work and data. I'm using Adobe CS on Windows 2000.
My questions: Are the project files stored in a format that is different from their native files (.ai, .psd, etc.)?
Does Version Cue store previous file versions in their entirety, or incrementally?
When files are being written, how likely is it that archived files can be damaged irreparably in the event of a system freeze, Version Cue crash, etc.?
Conversely, if documents are damaged in between backups, can Version Cue recover them reliably (including all archived versions)?
My questions: Are the project files stored in a format that is different from their native files (.ai, .psd, etc.)?
Does Version Cue store previous file versions in their entirety, or incrementally?
When files are being written, how likely is it that archived files can be damaged irreparably in the event of a system freeze, Version Cue crash, etc.?
Conversely, if documents are damaged in between backups, can Version Cue recover them reliably (including all archived versions)?