PaperBack by Olly icon
PaperBack by Olly icon

PaperBack by Olly

PaperBack is a free application that allows you to back up your precious files on the ordinary paper in the form of the oversized bitmaps.

PaperBack by Olly screenshot 1

Cost / License

  • Free
  • Open Source

Platforms

  • Windows
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Features

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  1.  Portable
  2.  Encrypted Backup

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PaperBack by Olly information

  • Developed by

    Oleh Yuschuk, Michael Mohr
  • Licensing

    Open Source and Free product.
  • Alternatives

    0 alternatives listed
  • Supported Languages

    • English

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Backup & Sync

Our users have written 1 comments and reviews about PaperBack by Olly, and it has gotten 2 likes

PaperBack by Olly was added to AlternativeTo by phi1010 on and this page was last updated .

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Top Positive Comment
OAKSIF0
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Cool. Nice concept.

What is PaperBack by Olly?

PaperBack is a free application that allows you to back up your precious files on the ordinary paper in the form of the oversized bitmaps. If you have a good laser printer with the 600 dpi resolution, you can save up to 500,000 bytes of uncompressed data on the single A4/Letter sheet. Integrated packer allows for much better data density - up to 3,000,000+ (three megabytes) of C code per page.

You may ask - why? Why, for heaven's sake, do I need to make paper backups, if there are so many alternative possibilities like CD-R's, DVD±R's, memory sticks, flash cards, hard disks, streamer tapes, ZIP drives, network storages, magnetooptical cartridges, and even 8-inch double-sided floppy disks formatted for DEC PDP-11? (I still have some). The answer is simple: you don't. However, by looking on CD or magnetic tape, you are not able to tell whether your data is readable or not. You must insert your medium into the drive (if you have one!) and try to read it.

Paper is different. Do you remember the punched cards? EBCDIC and all this stuff. For years, cards were the main storage medium for the source code. I agree that 100K+ programs were... unhandly, but hey, only real programmers dared to write applications of this size. And used cards were good as notepads, too. Punched tapes were also common. And even the most weird codings, like CDC or EBCDIC, were readable by humans (I mean, by real programmers).

Of course, bitmaps produced by PaperBack are also human-readable (with the small help of any decent microscope). I'm joking. What you need is a scanner attached to PC. And, of course, you can mail your printouts to the recipients anywhere in the world, even if they have no Internet access or live in the countries where such access is restricted by the regiment.

Oh yes, a scanner. For 600 dpi printer you will need a scanner with at least 900 dpi physical (let me emphasize, physical, not interpolated) resolution.

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