On backup strategies for the home…
So I had a thought this evening as I was looking at my router and seeing my upload tick across the megabytes while my Crash Plan was syncing to it’s cloud backup.
Do I really need to be doing whole user directory backups to the cloud?
It was a moment of reflection, I had installed crash plan on the new Mac last year because, well that is what I always have done since 2010 when I started with Carbonite. Yes, I had Time Machine… but after the great flower fire of 2010, I had been running a dual onsite / offsite backup strategy. A little belt and suspenders for home, but practice what you preach to the people at work. Fast forward seven years and my two major reasons for doing a multi backup strategy have pretty much gone by the way side.
- DEAR LORD I’M THE ONLY PERSON WITH COPIES OF XYZ PICTURE… because I’m a bit of a data hoarder, and apparently no one else in my family can be bothered to learn how to use FLICKR.
- Cloud syncing technology is pretty seamless now for user folders.
The first problem is pretty much taken care of by the fact that every photo I take is synced to three different services pretty much automatically off of my phone or main machine within 24 hours. So no issues with losing those pictures that appear to be only backed up by me. The second one wasn’t as in your face and really didn’t hit me till the last two weeks or so.
I signed up to start taking some classes and working towards a masters (that’ s a separate blog post when I feel like talking about it). Anyway the school uses Office 365 which I subscribe to on a personal level already. My entire workspace is through the Office 365 portal on the schools website, which I thought was pretty cool. Until I signed into my personal copy at home with my school credentials and had a second instance of OneDrive sync start up. Thats when it dawned on me, I’ve been on OneDrive for a couple of years now and could lose my computer tomorrow. I wouldn’t care everything I need is up in my OneDrive… it just took a few years for that particular wall to fall.
So now as I sit here looking at my Crash Plan app I’m wondering to myself, do I actually need to continue to pay for a service that while it does provide a complete copy of all my files and 30 days of deleted files…. it’s slow as hell doing a restore and kinda cumbersome for anything more then a folder or two. Also my /User/tom folder on my Mac is 86GB after documents, pictures, music, and some video, but before any of my Virtual Machines.
So that’s something to talk about there, what about Virtual Machines or larger databases you may have on your local machine. Well for me, I use rsync for the VM files themselves to be synced to my home server. After that I really don’t care, I don’t run anything production on the VM’s they are there specifically to play with and blow away as needed. The Windows VM machines are a little bit more temperamental then Linux for me, but that’s because I get annoyed that I have to license my Windows machines versus just popping a new Linux flavor.
So at the end of the day, the question is for me is there a good reason to keep paying for Crash Plan or something of it’s ilk? I honestly don’t know, in just the writing of this post I’ve gone through a fair amount of type space that says maybe not.
Things to chew on.