

CCC is made by Bombich Software and is distributed as shareware, but all features are available to the user whether he chooses to donate to the developers or not. It supports versions of MacOS X back to 10.2 (Jaguar)
(Note: version 3 of CCC is currently at a beta testing stage. One of the important new features it will introduce is the ability to do incremental backups, that is, to only backup files that have been changed since the last time you've used the app.)

Clearly the the most sophisticated interface is provided by SuperDuper! made by software developers Shirt Pocket. It offers several backup scripts - full backups, incremental backups, copy only shared user data, copy user data with applications, etc. The applications issues warnings before every action takes place. There is also nice descriptive text in a "What is going to happen?" textbox, explaining to the user exactly how his files will be affected. SuperDuper! alse lets you schedule backups, which is an easy way to make sure your backup copy is always up to date. This utility is the perfect choice for the novice backuper.
You can download SuperDuper! and use its basic functionality for free, but if you want any of the advanced options like schedules or incremental update or scripting you'll have to buy the full version, currently priced at $27.95. One thing I do not like at all about SuperDuper! is that the developers didn't grey-out the controls for features to give you a clear idea what you can and what you cannot do with the free version. Instead, each time you hit a button for an unavailable option you get a cheerful popup that politely asks to go and buy the real stuff. Well, maybe it is a personal thing.

PsyncX is a graphical tool developed by David Baker, which is built around the command line utility called psync, in turn developed by Dan Kogai. psync can make backups and restores preserving HFS+ file attributes, something traditional UNIX tools are not able to do. The GUI tool PsyncX offers you many advanced backup features, such as partial or full backups, make bootable backup volumes, backup to external disks, to disk images or to remote volumes over the network AND do scheduled backups. It does all this for free, accepting donations for author David Baker.
(Note for advanced & adventurous users: MacOS X Tiger comes with a version of rsync that makes copies and restores preserving the proper state of HFS+ attributes, resource forks, ACLs and what not. However, be aware that certain problems have been reported even with the most up-to-date version, shipped with 10.4.9. There are also many other UNIX based tools, such as rdiff-backup for example, which you can build a backup strategy around.)
The Verdict
My cuurent choice for personal backups lies with PsyncX, because it offers me a combination of features that I think are vital for a successful backup strategy - ease of use, so I don't put off using it and find out I've missed a whole month when my data is ruined, incremental backups, so backups take minutes and not ages and the ability to have a bootable copy of my startup drive available just in case.
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