Mike M wrote:Is that correct?
Basically, yes.
The need to keep different histories for your system and user documents means you need two archives. Whether these archives contain overlapping data is up to you, and your needs.
Create a "System" archive:
Capture your startup volume once a day
Keep the past 14 days
Excludes the contents of your home folder(s) (optional) Create a "User" archive:
Capture your home folder(s) every two hours or so
Create additional actions to capture important items the moment they change or are safe to capture (optional)
Keep the past week of hourly changes, then keep daily or weekly snapshots going back as far as you desire
Exclude the ~/Downloads (and any other extraneous) folders If you exclude the contents of your home folder from the "System" archive, then you won't have any duplicate effort. The drawback is that a full system restore will become a two-step process; you'll first have to restore your startup volume (from "System") and then restore the latest user folder (from "User").
James, as an aside, regarding the problem I reported, I am not trying to accomplish that task any more, and rather am experimenting with a new backup drive and setting up some backup along the lines I describe above. So there is no rush. If you discover something deeply broken, however, let me know.
The only real "problem" I saw had to do with your launch services database, which I suggest you reset. Not only will it make QRecall's job easier, but it will avoid random crashes in other apps too.