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Previously on "Home backup solution"

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  • tenpin
    replied
    Originally posted by TheFaQQer View Post
    It wasn't asked by Sysman - it was something tenpin said about using CrashPlan+
    It was a rhetorical question. What I meant to convey was that with a crashplan app on each of my home, work, fondleslab devices, I can use Crashplan to "recover" specific files from my backup onto the device in question. But Dropbox is useful when xferring between non-backed up devices. I have both :-)

    Leave a comment:


  • Sysman
    replied
    Originally posted by TheFaQQer View Post
    It wasn't asked by Sysman - it was something tenpin said about using CrashPlan+
    Yes. It's a bit too easy to get into the habit of dropping something into your Dropbox folder to transfer a file from one system on your desk to another system on your desk, virtual machines included, or putting a file onto a USB stick.

    Yep, that's laziness.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheFaQQer
    replied
    Originally posted by d000hg View Post
    Odd question.
    It wasn't asked by Sysman - it was something tenpin said about using CrashPlan+

    Leave a comment:


  • d000hg
    replied
    Originally posted by Sysman View Post
    Who needs Dropbox?
    Odd question.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sysman
    replied
    Originally posted by tenpin View Post
    Who knows?

    Some offline backup suppliers have done the price thing, others have disappeared. The big boys are getting in on the game as well now (iCloud, Amazon etc.). Good thing?
    Good thing as long as they don't drive the smaller suppliers out of business.

    Originally posted by tenpin View Post
    Right now I am glad that my "precious things" are offsite, that the software works transparently and that I can get back stuff easily, plus onto my iPad as well (who needs dropbox?). And I can backup the other half's computer onto mine and backup that backup to the cloud. So right now this works for me. Should CrashPlan start playing silly buggers, I'll move it elsewhere if a cheaper-but-equivalent is available.
    I have been using a small 500GB drive to transport stuff between home and office to spread stuff around, but that failed last week. Still under guarantee, and now I wish I'd encrypted it...

    Who needs Dropbox? It's a lazy way of transferring stuff I'll admit. As it happens I am just revisiting rsync and associated tools with a view to doing this stuff under my own steam.

    Leave a comment:


  • tenpin
    replied
    Originally posted by Sysman View Post
    With prices like that will they still be in business in a couple of years? Or will they jack the prices up once you are hooked?

    Serious questions.
    Who knows?

    Some offline backup suppliers have done the price thing, others have disappeared. The big boys are getting in on the game as well now (iCloud, Amazon etc.). Good thing?

    Right now I am glad that my "precious things" are offsite, that the software works transparently and that I can get back stuff easily, plus onto my iPad as well (who needs dropbox?). And I can backup the other half's computer onto mine and backup that backup to the cloud. So right now this works for me. Should CrashPlan start playing silly buggers, I'll move it elsewhere if a cheaper-but-equivalent is available.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheFaQQer
    replied
    Originally posted by tenpin View Post
    6 months ago a friend was burgled, they took two laptops, a server and his NAS holding his backup, plus a couple of external hard drives "hidden away". Lost all his photos, documents, work. Gone.

    This is what prompted me to move all my backups to Crashplan. 4 years offsite backup for less than £2/month. Unlimited.
    The danger of these cloud based things is that they don't like you storing your illegal downloads on their servers!!!

    I'm tempted, wondered whether I could back everything up to the NAS and then have that as the "one computer" on the plan, rather than having to pay $6 a month.

    Leave a comment:


  • Sysman
    replied
    Originally posted by tenpin View Post
    6 months ago a friend was burgled, they took two laptops, a server and his NAS holding his backup, plus a couple of external hard drives "hidden away". Lost all his photos, documents, work. Gone.

    This is what prompted me to move all my backups to Crashplan. 4 years offsite backup for less than £2/month. Unlimited.
    With prices like that will they still be in business in a couple of years? Or will they jack the prices up once you are hooked?

    Serious questions.

    Leave a comment:


  • tenpin
    replied
    Crashplan

    Originally posted by IanM View Post
    This may be too simple compared to some of the suggestions but Dropbox works well. It will automatically synchronise folders between different computers, including Macs, and does a backup at the same time. Its free up to 2Gbyte.

    Ian
    6 months ago a friend was burgled, they took two laptops, a server and his NAS holding his backup, plus a couple of external hard drives "hidden away". Lost all his photos, documents, work. Gone.

    This is what prompted me to move all my backups to Crashplan. 4 years offsite backup for less than £2/month. Unlimited.

    Leave a comment:


  • Spacecadet
    replied
    Originally posted by administrator View Post
    Have a look at SyncToy:
    Download Details - Microsoft Download Center - SyncToy 2.1

    Not used for a while but think it does incremental and differential backups - schedule via task manager. Worked well when I used in the past.
    That's what I've gone for in then end, several smaller drives which I'll keep synched

    Leave a comment:


  • Spacecadet
    replied
    Originally posted by IanM View Post
    This may be too simple compared to some of the suggestions but Dropbox works well. It will automatically synchronise folders between different computers, including Macs, and does a backup at the same time. Its free up to 2Gbyte.

    Ian
    I've got 4gb free thanks to referrals

    Leave a comment:


  • administrator
    replied
    Have a look at SyncToy:
    Download Details - Microsoft Download Center - SyncToy 2.1

    Not used for a while but think it does incremental and differential backups - schedule via task manager. Worked well when I used in the past.

    Leave a comment:


  • IanM
    replied
    This may be too simple compared to some of the suggestions but Dropbox works well. It will automatically synchronise folders between different computers, including Macs, and does a backup at the same time. Its free up to 2Gbyte.

    Ian

    Leave a comment:


  • snaw
    replied
    Cheers, I check them all out.

    Leave a comment:


  • xoggoth
    replied
    Comodo backup is good for whole directories. Also FBackup4, easier for individual files from here and there. I use both.

    Leave a comment:

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