![]() ![]() These can likely be uploaded to their online service. Able to take bare metal disk images (I'm unsure of if this works on the OS disk) to local volumes. ![]() Local and online backups can run on separate schedules. Includes local backup options to network shares E-mail notifications on success/failure. Includes versioning (10 previous versions) Includes a Dropbox-like sync service alongside the backup service. Unlimited computers bound to 2TB or 5TB of storage! Damn.Įdit: Hey! I just went and looked, IDrive's doing a 90% off of the first year at 2TB! $6.95! This knocked me right off the fence. Originally I planned to leave my NAS at my parents' place while I was in graduate school so that I had a safe place to keep my stuff. One of the worst things I've had to deal with recently is having a 1TB data cap dropped on me. So I'm considering IDrive on top of that. Possibly something like Duplicati and Nextcloud but this also means that I can't go buy a $15/mo family plan and legitimately back up all of my systems (which should max out at about 1.5-2TB). Now that they're shutting down I'm looking at other options. I don't like the solutions that require a service open that can delete/destroy the backup files without additional credentials. I wired it up to 8TB of NAS and had all of my machines backing up to it with far less concern that someone on my network would do something dumb and get me hit. One of the reasons I liked Crashplan was that, by using an arbitrary protocol and requiring a password to access its management interface, it provided an additional layer of security on the network that most ransomware would likely not be able to penetrate. ![]()
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