FastBack

FastBack[1] is a software application developed in the late 1980s and early 1990s for backing up IBM PC and Macintosh computers. It was originally written by Fifth Generation Systems Inc, a company located in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.[2] When the company wanted to expand into the Apple market they purchased and rebranded a product from TouchStone Software Corporation.

FastBack
FastBack Plus 1.0 for DOS, circa 1987.
Original author(s)Fifth Generation Systems Inc
Initial release1987 (1987)
Operating systemDOS, Windows, Mac OS
Available inEnglish
TypeBackup software
LicenseProprietary

The original FastBack was unique in the industry in that it was able to read from a computer hard drive and write to the floppy drive simultaneously using the full capability of the dual-channel DMA chip found in personal computers of that time. When combined with compression techniques[2] and a proprietary disk format that stored 720KB of data on each 360KB 5ΒΌ-inch floppy disk (only in 1.2MB drives), this made FastBack one of the fastest PC backup programs at the time.[3]


Version history

By 1984, Fastback (Version 5.13) was already on the market.[3]

In 1987, FastBack Plus 1.0 for DOS was released. This version, or subsequent DOS versions, was released with an unconditional guarantee against harm resulting from use of the software in the terms and conditions. The guarantee contrasted itself with industry norms.

In 1991, FastBack Plus 3.02 for DOS was released.[4]

In February 1992 the company released FastBack Plus 1.0 for Windows, written for PCs running Windows 3.0.[5]

FastBack Plus 2.0 was included with Novell DOS 7 in 1994.

FastBack II[6] was bundled with Drive 2.4 to provide read/write compatibility with most Macintosh 3.5" floppy disk formats.

Macintosh Versions

  • Fastback For The Macintosh (v1.01/1.02) - 1987 (v1.3 - 1988)
  • Fastback II (v2.10) - 1990
  • Fastback Plus (v3.0.1) - 1992

Features

The New York Times wrote about the standard DOS (MSBACKUP) utility, that it "cannot automatically awaken itself at 3 A.M. to make a full backup onto a quarter-inch cassette drive."[7]

Reception

BYTE in 1989 listed Fastback Plus as among the "Distinction" winners of the BYTE Awards, stating that "if you have a hard drive, we recommend this package".[8]

References

  1. Peter H. Lewis (June 7, 1988). "Backup Copy Of Hard Disk Averts Loss". The New York Times.
  2. Peter H. Lewis (July 25, 1989). "Personal Computers - Of Inevitable Sudden Death And Backing Up Your Files". The New York Times.
  3. "The Great Floppy Backup Shoot-Out". Fastest backup: Fastback v5.13 (1984)
  4. Latest Fastback Plus won't let you down, By Tom Bigley, Page 81, 1991-09-16, InfoWorld
  5. Review:Fastback Plus offers reliable backup under Windows, By Tom Bigley, Page 121, 1992-04-06, InfoWorld
  6. "TidBITS#51/Drive_2.4". Archived from the original on 2007-03-15. Retrieved 2007-01-10.
  7. Peter H. Lewis (January 4, 1994). "It's 1994. So Where Are Your Data?".
  8. "The BYTE Awards". BYTE. January 1989. p. 327.
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