into the upgrade system. And I know from what I don't know, I believe I understand that it doesn't back up your home directory. It just will back up the, if I'm not wrong, settings and system settings. So in case something does break. Oh, I see. Okay. So, that's why he's saying it's not a true backup. Yeah, that's why I said so. He makes several good points, but he's right that in Timeshift, it does say you shouldn't, you can, but you shouldn't store your Timeshift backups to the same disk. And my system's not set up like that. My system has a 120 gigabyte solid state where the operating system resides. And then I have a spinning drive that stores the programs and stuff. So I store all that on the spinning drive. And so if I didn't need to back up system files, it would go to the flash drive. So a lot of the new systems are hybrid systems where they use a solid state for the OS and then a big spinning drive for all the programs and storage. Yep. So that way you get them on two separate (8/65)
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