This is a free beta test version of a backup program for NVFS based Palm OS 5 devices like the Treo 650, T5, TX, LifeDrive and TE2. Users report success in backing up on the 700p, but have not told me about restore tests. (Please let me know if it works.) Unlike most other backup programs (Dmitry's PowerBackup is the one exception I know of right now), this one grabs data straight out of the hidden directory where they are hidden on NVFS device. In theory, this should make the backup faster and more reliable. But because doing this is undocumented, there is always danger. A backup made with NVBackup is likely not to work on other devices (e.g., a T5 backup cannot be restored on a TX). Don't try--it may crash your device. Also, if you make a backup, upgrade your Operating System, the old backup may not work--instead, either use another backup utility, or use hotsync to back up across OS upgrade. USE AT YOUR OWN RISK IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE LICENSE IN License.txt. THERE IS NO WARRANTY AT ALL PROVIDED. THIS MIGHT DAMAGE YOUR DEVICE AND YOUR DATA. Basic usage is simple. Insert an SD card with sufficient space (error checking is rudimentary!) and tap "New backup". You can refresh an old backup (i.e., add to it any files that have changed by selecting the backup and tapping "Update"). You can restore a backup. I recommend disabling any programs that run in the background, especially when restoring data. For technical reasons, after restoring, a soft reset will be forced. This is normal. If there was an error while backing up, the backup set will be flagged "(incomplete)". Restoring such a damaged set can cause problems, but there could be circumstances when that is your only hope. If you have a problem after restoring such a backup, you should do a hard reset (hold down POWER key while reseting, and then let go of POWER after the second Palm logo comes on; then erase data). You can Update an incomplete backup and thereby hopefully make it complete. Compression may slightly slow down the initial backup, but speeds up updates, and reduces space requirements by about 50%. NVBackup automatically copies itself to the backup card, so that to restore, you need only insert this card, and NVBackup will be available to the launcher. You can schedule a daily backup. Menu | Options | Schedule. You can set the time of the backup. The 'Cycle' count specifies how many automatic backups to keep. Once the maximum count is reached, the oldest of the 'Cycle' backups will be recycled. If you do not want a backup set to get recycled (e.g., because it is a backup set you really like), select the backup set, go to Menu | Backup sets | Edit details, and uncheck 'Include in scheduled cycle'. Likewise, if you have a manual backup that you want included in the automatic recycling, you can check that box in its details form. If "Cycle" is set to 1, then everyday at the specified time (unless you are at your PDA then and cancel the backup request--there will be 20 seconds to do that) the backup will be updated. If "Cycle" is set to, e.g., 3, then the last three backups will be updated (and if you don't have three backups yet created, they will be created day by day as needed), in a cyclic pattern, so you will have backups for the last three days. (You should be able to figure out how the 2 and 4 options work.) For scheduling to work, NV Backup must be found in Program Memory (RAM), not on a card. If you want your scheduled backup to be automatically uploaded to an ftp server, or to manually import/export a backup set from/to an ftp server use the Server menu from the main NVBackup screen to set up the server options. This is only for advanced users. You need to have access to an ftp server for this or run ftp server software (e.g., Filezilla, war-ftpd, pure-ftpd) on your PC. A feature that has little to do with backing up but that I've added is the ability to synchronize your clock with atomic clock time over the Internet. You can access this via Menu | Options | Preferences | Advanced. You can do this as a one-time procedure (tap on "Set time") or schedule it to happen after each scheduled backup. If you store confidential data, make sure you turn on encryption! This is true even if you use Palm's Security Panel to encrypt your data, both because the Security Panel's encryption only activates when the device turns off and because the Security Panel's encryption has a serious security hole. AES 128-bit encryption (no block chaining) is available for your backups. You can either store the encryption key (encrypted in an easy-to-crack way with your device ID) on your PDA, in which case you should presumably use Palm's security application (ideally together with Super Security: http://www.palmpowerups.com/modules.php?name=Downloads&d_op=MostPopular) to lock your PDA when you're not using it. If the key is stored you will not be asked for it on restore, unless you do a hard reset (and a hard reset is all an intruder can do if the device is properly secured) in which case the key will be lost and will have to be retyped. Or you can set the key to "Prompt" and be asked for it on each backup/restore operation. This is more secure, but useless for scheduled backup. Note that typing in the wrong key will still allow the restore operation to continue, but the files will fail to restore correctly--you'll get lots of error messages. You can then try again with the right key. If your PDA is locked with Palm's security feature when a scheduled backup is to be made, you need to tell NVBackup your device password. It will be stored encrypted with your device ID on your PDA (this is pretty easy to crack, but hopefully if you lock your device, nobody will get into your device; I recommend AES encrypting your backups in such a case as the stored device password will be contained in the backups). See Menu | Options | Preferences. The 'quick' login feature of Palm security is not supported. Source code is available at handypalmstuff.sf.net.