Should take approximately 15-20 mins depending on your wifi or internet connection speed. Depends whether you backup to iCloud or to iTunes. Backing up that amount of data to iTunes usually takes about a couple of minutes or so.. depending on the speed of your computer.
There's no direct way to transfer files from an iOS device to a Windows system. In general, the iTunes backup will depend on the size of data you want to backup. Since the data will be stored locally, your network speed won't matter whatsoever. You can expect anywhere between 1-2 hours for the backup to complete.
If you have an iPhone with 64 GB storage space, it'll take only a few minutes to back up. If you own the 256 GB model, it might even take an hour to back up the iPhone to iTunes.
Usually, backing up iPhone to iTunes will take 15-40 minutes depends on many factors. First of all, it includes the amount of data present on your iPhone and secondly, network speed. Slow network speed will take a large amount of time to back up your iPhone to iTunes.
It really depends upon what you are backing up. Small files shouldn't take more than a few minutes (or seconds), larger files (1GB for instance) may take 4 or 5 minutes or slightly longer. If you are backing up your whole drive you may be looking at hours for the backup.
It really depends upon what you are backing up. Small files shouldn't take more than a few minutes (or seconds), larger files (1GB for instance) may take 4 or 5 minutes or slightly longer. If you are backing up your whole drive you may be looking at hours for the backup.
Macrumors.com confirmed the faster charging, and stated an iPhone 6 can charge from empty to 90 percent, in just under 2 hours.
It normally takes less than 5 minutes. Check if you are connected to a network, If yes, Go Offline, And come back online.
It usually takes between 1 and 2 hours to restore an iPhone 6. It usually takes about an hour to restore an iPhone 6, but the time may vary depending on the amount of data that needs to be transferred.
Since all the backed-up data is stored on the cloud, internet speed plays a vital part in the backup time. Your internet speed should be up to the mark without any offline issues. For example, at a speed of 2MBPs, it might take you around one hour to back up about 64 GB.
Expect your first backup to take at least an hour (it's better to allow for several hours), then 1-10 minutes each day. The length of time an iCloud backup takes isn't a huge concern, especially after the first one.
At 5Mbps, for example, 100GB should take about 48 hours to backup. A terabyte backup would take less than three weeks. Double your internet upload speed, and you cut that in half.
A 500 GB backup may take a few hours (maybe up to 10, give or take). If it's a USB connected drive, it may take longer. I would figure the estimate will eventually adjust properly; just let it run.