![]() ![]() In my ISP’s 4 tier system, I subscribe to the 2nd fastest, which is 5MBPS down, 0. I recently subscribed (2-year) but would like to make a few comments for those who might not have a relatively high-speed Internet upload. Thank you, Joseph, for your explanation of BackBlaze. The engineers at Backblaze recently added a “silent mode” feature where if you’re in the “Only when I click ” mode, then the scanner does NOT run throughout the day. For this reason I’ve switched my backup routine to only kick in when I click “Backup Now”. It’s not the upload that slows you down, but the scanning of the hard drive, looking for new files to back up. If you happen to be uploading a massive file and want full bandwidth for that, you can always pause a backup that may be slowing you down.įor really intense users such as myself, it’s possible that you’ll find sporadic slowdowns while working (most noticeably in Aperture, unfortunately), when the Backblaze scanner kicks in. With the auto-throttle turned on, you are unlikely to ever notice that it’s happening. Day to day use, and a note on performanceįor most users, you can set it to fully automatic, and every so often a Backblaze daemon fires up and scans your drive for new material to backup, then starts pushing new content to the servers. If you’re going on African safari for two months you may want to leave your computer on at home or have someone boot it up every few weeks, but other than that, it’s set it and forget it. ![]() One caveat is that if a drive isn’t plugged in once per 30 days, then the backups will be removed from the server, however for your normal every-day attached drives, then the sky is the limit. That’s for unlimited storage, and they allow backing up of external drives. $5 per month (per computer) if you pay monthly, or under $4 per month if you pay two years in advance. Check out this screenshot:Īccording to Backblaze, I have over 3 TB stored with them The cost of securityīackblaze is cheap. I have a 10 Mbps upload speed (admittedly faster than many), and Backblaze reports about 8 Mbps average. On Monday I was on a small shoot and brought home 15 GB of data. You could have been backed up completely by now, probably several times over. How long have you had your computer? How long have you been putting off backing up? More than four months? Sure you have. 2 TB of data = 2,000 GB = 2,000 hours ÷ 24 = 83 days = 2.7 months, plus 50% and we’re still looking at just over four months for the initial 2 TB backup. Yeah but you have Terabytes of data! OK, fine. ![]() OK so that’s at full-tilt, and obviously you will be using your internet connection for other things, so let’s be generous and add a 50% overhead… that’s still only 30 days. 1 GB per hour, that’s 500 hours ÷ 24 hours = 20.8 days. Let’s say your internal 1 TB HD is ½ full, so 500 GB. Yes, it’s true, your first upload could take weeks or even months to finish. So let’s just call it a gig per hour if you’re getting full bandwidth and you’re not using your connection for anything else. Using the Download Time Calculator, a 1 GB file will transfer at 2.048 Mbps in just over 1 hour. That seems to be pretty common from what I’ve seen. Let’s say you have a pretty standard high-speed internet connection giving you 2 Mbs upload speed. That said, a lot of users say “sounds good but I don’t have the bandwidth to use it for my photo files”. The only bill I’m paying with that is maybe dinner once a month, so I’m not making a living suggesting you use this service. Most of you know by now I’m a big fan of cloud backup, and specifically Backblaze - and in full disclosure I do not take any advertising or promotional revenue from them, however I do often post my affiliate link.
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