![]() ![]() My end goal is to backup most things to the cloud, and do the same backup to local storage with some additional extra stuff that's not critical to replicate to B2 storage, but something I still want to keep around. Is anyone running Duplicacy for years now without issue? Can it replicate to local backup locations as well? OneDrive personal is much stingier with storage. At least CrashPlan Pro worked, albeit slowly. Apparently, Microsoft has two versions of OneDrive: OneDrive personal, which I’m pretty sure Duplicacy supports today, and OneDrive business, which uses a separate API (so I’m told) OneDrive for business is included in offerings like Office 365, which gives you 1TB of free storage. Is this a valid strategy or should I just be doing something else entirely? I'm becoming a bit frustrated with these backup apps. I understand a personal-use license is $20 for the first year then just $5/year after that? I can deal with that, not too bad. Not something I want to keep messing with. Upon looking further this happens to people a lot, seemingly after a few months their DBs get messed up and unrecoverable and they have to setup a new backup or manually repair the DB. I tried setting up Duplicati (I really liked that it was free, and seemed to be a very popular LSIO container) and that worked for for a number of months but last night the database corrupted itself and used a whole ton of B and C calls to B2 and drove up my bill. I spent probably 2 or 3 weeks testing it out and it always resulted in failure, wasn't worth the time anymore after they told me they'd never support it. I tried using CloudBerry but it kept erroring out on a TON of files and CloudBerry support wouldn't help since it's running on an unsupported setup in docker. I use to be with CrashPlan until my specail promo pricing ran out, ditched that entirely now and cancelled my account, as I was paying way more than the storage I'd use on BackBlaze B2 But sadly it is not a solution for everyone.Hi all, I'm sure this is a popular thing people do, but long story short. So, my personal conclusion: I will go with Restic. restore works quick and reliably, but only from the command line possibly also newbies can do it if given command line examples.I found a very good set of scripts for Windows that very nicely wrap around Restic and set up a regular task within the Windows task scheduler: GitHub - kmwoley/restic-windows-backup: Powershell scripts to run Restic backups on Windows - once set up by an expert I think this will also work fine for newbies.A free download option is available to check the software. Remove duplicates emails in all versions of Outlook that includes 2019, 2016, 2013, 2007, and more. backup speed was (surprisingly) slower for me than with Duplicati Remove the duplicates based on the given time span that means it can find the duplicates within a given time either one day or one week or any given time period.no GUI, thus really only for the tech-savvy.might be a good option for someone needing a GUI and having the same trust issues re Duplicati that I have.50 USD for one computer or 80 USD for 5 computers, and updates for only one year seemed unattractive for me.backup speed was slower than Duplicati, but I did not complete the whole backup.the GUI is really old-fashioned and cumbersome.there are reviews on the net where people have commented check out the comments by “Kevin Black” and “AJ” on this page: Duplicati Review 2022 - I have to say, what “Kevin Black” writes agrees with my subjective impression I did not feel that I could trust it in case of a full data loss, and that is for me a showstopper - so I will not go with it.but: in case of a catastrophic event, the local configured backup job will no longer be available I thus tried to restore a file just using the data in the backup, and there problems started in particular it started to rebuild some database which progressed extremely slowly after some 20 minutes or so I decided to cancel this really did not instill trust in me.restore from existing (configured) backup job went smoothly.when trying to cancel running backup jobs sometimes no reaction at all, also (I think) some strange behaviour when trying to continue a previously interrupted backup job fast backup speed both on first backup and later snapshots.Here is my - personal and thus subjective - experience with them: I was dealing with 120,000 files totalling 1.7 TB worth of data. So I tried all three backup clients recommended for syncosync under Windows. ![]()
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