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- Jul 21, 2014
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I've been thinking for a while that my backup provisions are a bit haphazard and whilst loss of most of what I've got stored would be inconvenient, other losses would be a right royal PITA eg document for my business, accounts, HMRC stuff, tenancy agreements, inventories etc etc.
My set up is several PCs running windows networked to all access a Synology NAS box configured as two discrete HDD (not a raid array). When I remember to, one NSA drive get backed up onto the other one.
These NAS drives are getting on a bit although not reporting any problems but sods law says one day they will.
Synology have some software called Cloud Sync (imaginitive name eh?) which claims to talk to most of the common cloud based services.
My question is firstly is anyone here doing something like this with their NAS and secondly is there much to choose between cloud providers. Free services are always attractive although I could justify a small outlay as a legit business expense if there was a compelling advantage. I think I'll only need a few GBytes.
Any thoughts please.
Bob
N.B.
I've got a dropbox account used for odds and ends and would rather keep that separate.
I've bit of an aversion to signing in to microsoft or giving them any network access as I do run a few unlicenced m$ legacy programs.
Strangly and perhaps illogically, I don't mind Google and already have a google drive set up use their email sevices etc etc
My set up is several PCs running windows networked to all access a Synology NAS box configured as two discrete HDD (not a raid array). When I remember to, one NSA drive get backed up onto the other one.
These NAS drives are getting on a bit although not reporting any problems but sods law says one day they will.
Synology have some software called Cloud Sync (imaginitive name eh?) which claims to talk to most of the common cloud based services.
My question is firstly is anyone here doing something like this with their NAS and secondly is there much to choose between cloud providers. Free services are always attractive although I could justify a small outlay as a legit business expense if there was a compelling advantage. I think I'll only need a few GBytes.
Any thoughts please.
Bob
N.B.
I've got a dropbox account used for odds and ends and would rather keep that separate.
I've bit of an aversion to signing in to microsoft or giving them any network access as I do run a few unlicenced m$ legacy programs.
Strangly and perhaps illogically, I don't mind Google and already have a google drive set up use their email sevices etc etc


