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Your disaster recovery thinking is solid—the gap is not strategy, but execution. Tape is reliable and economical for backups, but it isn’t built to deliver fast recovery on its own, especially when the original infrastructure and backup catalogs are gone. By pairing your existing LTO setup with a small off-site system and Stellar Data Recovery for Tape, you gain a practical, catalog-independent way to restore critical data within hours rather than days. This approach keeps costs under control, avoids a full environment rebuild, and gives your team timely access to the files they need to stay productive after a worst-case event.

  • This reply was modified 2 weeks, 3 days ago by tohoko.

Hello,

We’re a small business with roughly 50 knowledge workers and around 50 TB of data housed in a single building. We currently run a tape-based backup system in our server room using Backup Exec and LTO-6/LTO-7, and it works well for day-to-day protection.

Our concern is disaster recovery. If the server room were destroyed, we wouldn’t be able to restore data from tape until new hardware and a new location were in place. The resulting downtime would be unacceptable for the business.

To reduce recovery time, we’re exploring the idea of maintaining a minimal off-site system with a tape drive installed. The goal would be to restore selected data quickly so staff could continue working on reports and other tasks from home using our existing O365 environment. I asked our vendor for a quote, which led to a conversation with Quantum, and the response I received was essentially that this is “not how it’s done.”

  • This topic was modified 2 weeks, 3 days ago by tohoko.
  • This topic was modified 2 weeks, 3 days ago by tohoko.

Hi, thanks for the suggestions above. After completing the scan, I was able to recover my data successfully using Stellar Data Recovery, as shown in the image.

My Image

 

 

 

  • This reply was modified 2 weeks, 4 days ago by Nina Calder.
  • This reply was modified 2 weeks, 4 days ago by Nina Calder.

Thanks for checking in.

I first tried the organic options, but unfortunately, they didn’t work. As suggested by SAPOP, I then used Stellar Data Recovery, and it seems to be working.

The scan is still in progress, so I’m hoping for the best and will update you once it’s completed.

 

Hi Nina,

Sorry to hear you’re dealing with this — that’s a stressful situation. Were you able to recover any of the missing or corrupted files yet? If so, I’d be interested to know what worked for you (backup restore, Windows recovery options, or something else).

  • This reply was modified 3 weeks, 1 day ago by dotoson.

Some people have criticized Tahoe’s UI for an “icon problem” — specifically, Apple adding icons next to almost every menu item, which some designers argue goes against Apple’s own historic Human Interface Guidelines and can clutter menus rather than help users.

In addition, there are reports of inconsistent or non-uniform icons representing similar actions in different parts of the OS, which can confuse users and make the UI feel less polished.

I have an icon problem on Tahoe. What’s going on?

There have been reports of high-end Macs (especially with M3 Ultra chips) becoming unbootable after an attempted Tahoe upgrade. Some community reports describe machines ending up in a state where they won’t start normally after the update process, suggesting firmware or RecoveryOS corruption during the install.

The only recovery option that’s worked for many affected users is using DFU Revive or DFU Restore via Apple Configurator and a second Mac connection — a deep low-level rescue method that can reinstall firmware and system software.

This experience reinforces the advice to always back up before major OS upgrades and, when possible, wait for early point releases before installing on mission-critical machines.

What happened in the case of someone bricking a $3,700 Mac Studio by upgrading to macOS 26 Tahoe?

Yes — some reviewers and users think the Software Update UI in System Settings is needlessly confusing. In particular, the way “Update” and “Upgrade” buttons are styled, and the presence of small information (“ⓘ”) icons next to them, can make it unclear what clicking a button will actually do (e.g., update the current macOS version vs. install the big Tahoe upgrade).

 

Users on discussion boards have echoed this frustration, saying the UI design makes it easy to accidentally trigger a major upgrade when you intended only a minor update.

Do people find the Software Update UI confusing for upgrading to macOS 26 Tahoe?

Many users have reported random freezes, slow performance, and crashes after updating to macOS Tahoe. A frequent culprit appears to be system services like Spotlight, which may over-consume resources or behave differently under Tahoe. Turning off certain Spotlight features (like “Show Related Content” and analytics settings) has helped some people stop freezes.

Apple’s community forums also show reports of severe lag and cursor hangs, suggesting it’s not limited to a single model.

Common fixes people try include:

  • Updating macOS to the latest minor release (where Apple has patched bugs).
  • Booting in Safe Mode to isolate problematic login items or extensions.
  • Resetting NVRAM/PRAM and reinstalling the OS.

Why is macOS Tahoe freezing and crashing my MacBook?

In a recent incident, we recently dealt with a security issue involving an enterprise-level AI solution. During the remedial process, we had to revert changes, reimage some systems, as well as optimize user environments.

The security issue has been solved, but the problem is that some important files that were in the system locally and synchronized online have disappeared after doing a system cleanup. Our backups restored everything for us, though some user files and project files were not restored.

Has anyone experienced such a situation after a major security threat? Are there any methods to restore data that is normally lost in the remediation process, especially in cases of reimaged computers?

I recently lost important files from a USB drive after an improper eject. The drive now shows up, but a number of folders are missing and a few files won’t open.

Before resorting to expensive professional recovery services, can anyone suggest some software-based steps that actually work to recover data from corrupted or otherwise inaccessible USB drives?

Urgent help needed.

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