It’s at this point I decided it wasn’t the right time to move online. So my first backup wouldn’t complete for 40 weeks! And this isn’t including the files that get added during that time. So I did a calculation of how long the backup would take to complete using my current bandwidth, if I left it on for 5 hours a day (which is more than I normally use it): A few years ago it would be switched on 24/7 when I was doing 3D rendering but I don’t do that any more.
Now, my PC is only switched on when I’m using it. A connection speed test using a wireless connection and wired connection using a laptop came back with the same results – my upload speed was 10Mbps.Ĭhecking the Backblaze client indicated that it was using all the bandwidth available to it, and backing up around 2GB per hour. I wondered whether it was because my PC was connected to the ISP router over a wireless connection.
The reason they give for is is that most users don’t want to decide what to backup! I had several very big folders on my drives which I didn’t want backed up, and managed to exclude them (though exclusion folder names apply to all drives).Īfter a few days it had only backed up about 10GB, which was a long way to go to get to a complete full backup set. By default it backs up everything, even your OS drive. The first thing that surprised me was that you can’t easily choose what to backup. I signed up for a 30 day trial, and installed the PC client. It sounded very good, $5 a month for 1 computer – unlimited backup sizes, unlimited file sizes, and backups of external drives. Unfortunately, CrashPlan was putting an end to the Home Service, I’m assuming it wasn’t profitable enough for them. This is a breakdown of my usage as of today:Īfter a bit of research online I came up with options Backblaze or CrashPlan – they are both reasonably priced and have good reviews. Using a Canon DSLR regularly along with a GoPro style helmet cam means the storage of photos and music grows rapidly. So for now the backup consists of two drives which are roughly 4TB in total.ĤTB might sound like a lot but I have a lot of photos, music and videos to backup.
Ideally I’d have to two sets of drives so that the data and backups are never in the same location – I’ll get to that someday. Since then I keep copies of all my important data on USB drives which I keep in work, and bring home monthly to update, the process is described here. CrashPlan is a natural choice for Synology users as there is an excellent docker container that will directly integrate with your Synology and automatically sync your folders with CrashPlan. Computers were single drives then so I lost all of my data and operating system too. CrashPlan, now owned by Code42 and called CrashPlan for Small Business is 10/month for unlimited storage. In the days when 100MB drives were the norm and Microsoft Office came on 43 floppy disks, in the process of formatting a floppy disk I somehow managed to format my work hard drive.