@ETpro
Carbonite is a decent backup but it doesn’t get everything (unless your willing to pay a lot more). Things like multiple drives and the programs that that are either no longer supported or not compatible with your new operating system. There was a chance that I could have recovered the disk I lost but the estimates to do so were in the thousands. I got most of my data back but it was a chore recreating it. Some things are simply gone forever.
As long as the question is pertinent to my problem, I’ll go into some of the pitfalls I hit in hopes that @jengray72 may avoid them should he seek to go this way. I do everything on the computer. I get messages on prices, bank deposits, and myriad of things pertinent to running the business daily. So when my disk crashed, I was panicked to get back on line immediately. While the technicians were working to try and recover my data, I decided to buy a new computer. All the computers out there were running Vista and I had been running XP. I didn’t think there would be a major problem so I went forward. As it turns out much of the software I had was not compatible with vista. I didn’t get error messages while loading it but the computer would start acting funny and then stop working. Those programs were mostly no longer available or not available for Vista. So even the second drive I had in my original machine had problems due to compatibility issues. I decided to get my original computer running with a new drive. Unfortunately my operating system and most of my software were on the drive that crashed. If you haven’t noticed computers no longer come with a recovery disk. They expect you to create one when you first bring up the new computer. Guess what, I hadn’t done that. And as luck would have it, the old recovery disk for that system was no longer available from the manufacturer. So in order to gain access to my old drive (the one that still worked) I needed to buy a new operating system (XP) for a system I had already spent hundreds to try and fix and no longer needed. Bottom line is I spent weeks getting my system back to where it is now and I still lost a lot of data.
I seem to be a glutton for punishment because I still do everything on the computer. Frankly even with the time I devoted to recovery, I still save time in searching for and filing documents. Mostly paperless is the way to go but be diligent in your backup and pay close attention to upgrades. What is and what is not compatible. It can jump up and bite you when you least expect it.