"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Not a fan of cloud based back up. Too slow often, and too small the rest of the time.I prefer to keep an in house server to back up our data. We have over 10tb of data here, which is a lot for just 2 people. But we do a ton of design work so our customers files are very important to them and us. They know if they lose it, we wont!
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on July 26, 2011, 08:43:49 AMNot a fan of cloud based back up. Too slow often, and too small the rest of the time.I prefer to keep an in house server to back up our data. We have over 10tb of data here, which is a lot for just 2 people. But we do a ton of design work so our customers files are very important to them and us. They know if they lose it, we wont!Brandt, I agree with keeping it in-house for faster access but what happens if the building burns down or you lose the server due to hardware or theft? 20 years in IT, I've seen it happen to many times so I do hope you have some type of off site backup. Like you said, your customers are dependent on you to have their files.
We use backblaze.com for our backups. It's $5 a month for unlimited storage. It backs up in real time over the internet. The cool thing was i had a piece of art, it was only on my computer for about 30 minutes. I thought i was done with it so i trashed it. Then realizing i needed it i was able to pop on their website and sure nuff.. It was there for me to redownload. Can't say enough good stuff about backblaze.
$60 on carbonite only gets you one machine, no NAS support is offered at all. I have multiple machines I want to back up, plus a NAS. Carbonite seems good for single users but is not network friendly so far.