User`s guide

9 Glossary of Terms
A
Acronis Startup Recovery Manager
A protection tool that allows to start
standalone version of Acronis True Image
Home 2011 Netbook Edition at boot time
when F11 is pressed. Acronis Startup Recovery
Manager eliminates the need for rescue
media.
Acronis Startup Recovery Manager is
especially useful for mobile users. If a failure
occurs, the user reboots the machine, hits F11
on prompt "Press F11 for Acronis Startup
Recovery Manager…" and performs data
recovery in the same way as with ordinary
bootable media.
Limitations: cannot be organized on a dynamic
disk; requires manual configuration of boot
loaders, such as LILO and GRUB; requires
re-activation of third-party loaders.
B
Backup
1. The same as Backup operation (p. 164).
2. A set of backup versions created and
managed by using backup settings. A
backup can contain multiple backup
versions created using full (p. 165) and
incremental (p. 165) backup methods.
Backup versions belonging to the same
backup are usually stored in the same
location.
Backup operation
An operation that creates a copy of the data
that exists on a machine's hard disk for the
purpose of recovering or reverting the data to
a specified date and time.
Backup settings
A set of rules configured by a user when
creating a new backup. The rules control the
backup process. Later you can edit the backup
settings to change or optimize the backup
process.
Backup version
The result of a single backup operation (p.
164). Physically, it is a file or a set of files that
contains a copy of the backed up data as of a
specific date and time. Backup version files
created by Acronis True Image Home 2011
Netbook Edition have a TIB extension. The TIB
files resulting from consolidation of backup
versions are also called backup versions.
Backup version chain
Sequence of minimum 2 backup versions (p.
164) that consist of the first full backup
version and the subsequent one or more
incremental or differential backup versions.
Backup version chain continues till the next
full backup version (if any).
Bootable media
A physical media (CD, DVD, USB flash drive or
other media supported by a machine BIOS as a
boot device) that contains stanalone version
of Acronis True Image Home 2011 Netbook
Edition.
Bootable media is most often used to:
recover an operating system that cannot
start
access and back up the data that has
survived in a corrupted system
deploy an operating system on bare metal
create basic or dynamic volumes on bare
metal
back up sector-by-sector a disk that has an
unsupported file system