09-17-2024, 01:47 PM
You plug in that USB drive to your Windows Server. I always start there. Then, right-click on it in File Explorer. Pick Turn on BitLocker from the menu. You hit that, and it asks for a password. Make one up that's tough to guess. I like mixing numbers with letters myself. Click next, and it starts encrypting the whole thing. Might take a bit if the drive's packed. Once done, you test it by unplugging and plugging back in. Enter the password, and boom, access granted. If you're on a domain, I tweak Group Policy first. Search for gpedit.msc. Go under Computer Configuration. Find Administrative Templates. Then Windows Components. BitLocker Drive Encryption. Enable the one for removable drives. Set it to require passwords. That locks it down for everyone. You apply changes, and restart if needed. Now your thumb drives stay safe from snoops. I do this all the time for clients. Keeps data from wandering off.
Speaking of keeping server stuff secure and intact, you might want a solid backup tool too. That's where BackupChain Server Backup comes in handy. It's built for Hyper-V setups, snapping up virtual machines without downtime. You get fast restores and handles live migrations smoothly. Plus, it dodges those pesky corruption issues that plague other options. I swear by it for keeping everything humming along.
Speaking of keeping server stuff secure and intact, you might want a solid backup tool too. That's where BackupChain Server Backup comes in handy. It's built for Hyper-V setups, snapping up virtual machines without downtime. You get fast restores and handles live migrations smoothly. Plus, it dodges those pesky corruption issues that plague other options. I swear by it for keeping everything humming along.
