Probably one of the best advices on this forum. It's all too common that a restore doesn't work.if you plan for a Disaster Recovery solution don't limit yourself to backup your files; from time to time try a restore operation.
Why a test restore is important? Because you may find that one or more critical files got corrupted, others weren't saved at all, etc.
Only a full restore will tell you that in case of a disaster you will be able to be fully operative again (and how much time it will take you).
You can try the German Telekom Magenta cloud. There is a free service with 3GB for non Telekom customers, for Telekom customers you get 15 GB for free.Which provider do you use to backup your files, pictures etc.? and are you satisfied with it?
I've been using Microsoft OneDrive for years and I'm not happy with it, synchronization takes a long time, videos often take a long time to load on the phone and then it's usually the worst quality...
The reason I'm worried about this now is that since the update to mac OS Big Sure, Onedrive no longer works on the mac and microsoft can't seem to get a handle on it for 3 months. And also generally onedrive on the mac is absolutely not recommended, the synchronization takes even longer than with windows... It really hurts to use onedrive on the mac.
I had "unlimited webspace" hosting with them when they were 1&1, I think about 12 years ago, and when a friend wanted to host ~20 GB of OpenStreetMap country files, I said: hey, no worries, use this.I have an older 1and1 (IONOS) contract with unlimted storage
Now I use iDrive, which gives "limited" space (5 TB) (TB, not GB) to back up multiple computers for USD 6 per month.
That's been my option for some years. freeNAS or Open Meida Vault or something (LINUX). When I worked I had a NAS unit that had its own Cloud service software that one could set up so that the NAS unit itself become a cloud storage device ... which they actually naturally are anyway.I will only change if I can get a NAS to be securely accessible from ... everywhere.
a Disaster Recovery solution
Interesting... can you point to the your NAS model... your setup is what I was looking for... plus, do you think it would be possible to create a client for the NAS, using B4X products, specially AndroidSynology NAS (~150€) + 2x4Tb Hard Drives in Raid 1 (~240€)
Besides the usual stuff that comes on the NAS (Firewall, User Management, Network drive, FTP server, HTTP Server, Database Server, Torrent Client), I installed NextCloud on it because I don't like the Synology client apps. The nextcloud client is installed on all my family computers / devices, so they are all synced/backed up with the Nas Cloud. For security reasons, there is only 1 ssl port open to the outside world and all services are only available on the local Lan.
Besides NextCloud I additionally use SyncBack on my main windows machine to sync all my development / essential directories to my user NAS account drive once a week (2 different ways to backup, in separate "file spaces")
I really fell in love with current state of NAS technology, so I also run a full linux server on a Terramaster Nas (hacked) where I installed 4Gb additional ram and boot NethServer.
P.S. : Forgot to mention, you can also run java8 on the Synology nas, so i can push B4J servers / apps to it and test them there.
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