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- #CLOUDBERRY BACKUP THERE WAS NO ENDPOINT LISTENING AT PRO#
- #CLOUDBERRY BACKUP THERE WAS NO ENDPOINT LISTENING AT PC#
- #CLOUDBERRY BACKUP THERE WAS NO ENDPOINT LISTENING AT FREE#
Talk about a double whammy! Crash Plan, you have basically cut my business and myself off at the knees here. Earlier this year, they announce that they will no longer support running their product on a Server OS, and now they are telling me I cant use their product at home.
#CLOUDBERRY BACKUP THERE WAS NO ENDPOINT LISTENING AT PRO#
I'm sure I am not the only one in this boat but my company has been using Crash Plan Pro for backing up our file servers and I have been using Crash Plan Home for my computer at home. Plain duplication covers none of these issues, and while it is handy if someone steals my PC, or for me to look at my cat videos on multiple devices, it's not a real business solution. A dead disk or blown server or RAID array means loading all the good stuff into new equipment. One needs to be able to restore to other than the original location.Backups are typically periodic snapshots, as opposed to realtime backup so that if things like ransomware do come along, it's possible to stop backups before uploading infected files, or versioning is in place, or some vendors claim to be able to spot infected files and block their uploading.
#CLOUDBERRY BACKUP THERE WAS NO ENDPOINT LISTENING AT PC#
#CLOUDBERRY BACKUP THERE WAS NO ENDPOINT LISTENING AT FREE#
I've used the free version for years, and considered paid versions, but really, just have not needed the additional features.īackup is not quite that simple. Someone else mentioned versioning, which is a feature of backup, obviously good, and supported by Syncback paid versions.īTW, I have no financial ties to Syncback. It may not be offsite/cloud backup by itself, but it's still backup. Backup, in its simplest form, is as a copy of the same file in a different location.
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Regarding SyncBack, one said it wasn't backup. But SyncBack is a robust second system that can run continuously and protect your very latest files. You should still have a real, air-gapped backup system in place, as I am sure ChocolateMint would agree. Those precautions apply to other backup products, not just SyncBack. You can set that up by mounting and unmounting drives or, for a NAS, set up a separate account used only for backups. It is best to have the backup media inaccessible. All SyncBack editions, even the free one, can abort a backup if too many deletions or changes are detected. However, if your files are backed up to a share or drive that is accessible to malware, it could delete all your files and versions on the backup share or drive.
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They also have anti-ransomware features that can stop SyncBack from running if ransomware is detected. You can roll back all your files to a point-in-time. SyncBack SE ($39.95) and Pro ($54.95) offer versioning. If all you want to do is copy your files somewhere it's very good at what it does, but don't mistake it for a backup program.