The Great KeepVault for Windows Home Server Giveaway – Day 5

It’s the biggie!

This week, we’ve got another in our series of great giveaways for WGS readers, and this time around the brand spanking new version of KeepVault for Windows Home Server is up for grabs!
KeepVault is an online backup add-in for Windows Home Server, and developers Proxure are about to release version 3.0 of the application, which brings a variety of new features including:

  • Improved performance – now up to 30% faster backup uploads and downloads
  • Improved user interface with at-a-glance status and feedback for the user
  • Reduced load on the Windows Home Server via optimized local database of backup status
  • Ability to create local backups of information on local external hard disks so you can restore quickly if no Internet connection is available
  • Notification via Twitter, Email, or SMS if there is a backup failure
  • Ability to backup any file on the Windows Home Server, not just digital photos, music, and video shares
  • Improved management of online content for optimized storage usage

Today, our competition culminates in the giving away of a 100Gb package to one especially lucky reader! That’s one big chunk of online backup! Today’s question is a big one:

Q: If you could store just one memory from your life to revisit in future years, what would it be?

Thanks to everyone who’s entered the competition this week, and of course, to Proxure for offering up the prize booty!

Enter: WGS Forums


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About Terry Walsh

Terry Walsh is the founding editor and owner of We Got Served. Since February 2007, the site has provided detailed coverage and analysis of the emerging home server category, and has subsequently grown into a trusted outlet for digital home news and reviews.

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  • dan

    Mine would be my upcoming wedding and honeymoon to thatiti

  • http://dbone1026.blogspot.com DamianP

    Birth of my son.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/KevinBJ KevinBJ

    My wedding day.

  • http://www.justechn.com Ryan McLaughlin

    That is a really good, thought provoking question. My first impulse is to say my children's birth or my wedding, but I already have videos and pictures, of those events. The question did not indicate that the other memories would be destroyed so I assume I can keep those. The question is also vague about how the memory is obtained, does it have to be something that we currently remember, something in the future, something we already have recorded, or can it be something happened to us, but we don't remember it. Since it is not specified I am going to take the liberty of picking something from my past that I don't remember.

    This may sound morbid, but when I was 2 I was run over by a car. I don't personally remember anything about this event, but I have been given bits a pieces from family and friends that remember. So much of my life has been effected by this one event, I spent quite a bit of time in the hospital, I could not play a lot of sports, I was left with large visible scars, and I also developed an empathy for others that I may not have had otherwise. I would like see that event, show it to my children, and my wife so that we could all understand the event that changed my life and made me into the person I am today.

  • wim

    the day my whs runs perfectly

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/rusgrafx rusgrafx

    Oh, it's a tough one. There are so many memories and all of them are precious, well… most of them anyway. Every day of our lives shape us up, make us what we are. I agree with Ryan that bad memories could be as valuable as the good ones. So, I'd like to keep them all, that's the reason we have WHSs in the first place, right? :)

    Would a movie of one's entire life be considered 'one memory'? Let's call it 'a memory of my existence'. That's what I would save!