

- #CLOUDBERRY BACKUP RESTORE ACTIVATION CODE#
- #CLOUDBERRY BACKUP RESTORE INSTALL#
- #CLOUDBERRY BACKUP RESTORE FULL#
- #CLOUDBERRY BACKUP RESTORE PRO#
- #CLOUDBERRY BACKUP RESTORE SOFTWARE#
Overall, I liked the basic features included in the Freeware version. Here is a complete comparison page for all the versions CloudBerry offers. If you are looking for a Server backup solution as well, CloudBerry offers a version that works for Windows Server 2003 and above for $119.99 per server that bumps up the storage limit to 1TB and 5 network shares as well.
#CLOUDBERRY BACKUP RESTORE PRO#
Upgrading to Pro version for $29.99 increase the storage limit to 1TB with the support for encryption and compression. You can use it to back your data from your local computer or one network share to any cloud storage of your choice, up to 200GB. What’s included in CloudBerry Desktop FreeĬloudBerry Desktop Free runs on Windows desktop system, from Windows 7 and above. Again, it’s going to be another wizard prepared for you to go through. Or, you can just go to Restore Plans and start creating a new one. If the data you are about to restore is already backed up, you can start it off from the Backup Job under Backup Plans tab. There are basically two ways to start a restore job. Now let’s turn to the other side of the recovery equation, performing a restore job. You can edit the job, delete the job if needed, or perform Restore job, view what’s in the backup storage right from there. There are three pre-defined backup plans for your Internet Bookmarks, Pictures, and Documents. The Backup Plans tab lists all scheduled backup jobs. You can create backup jobs and schedule it to run at the certain time or just run it in real-time if you need to perform a quick backup out of the backup window. Amazon S3, Amazon Glacier, Azure, Google Cloud, OpenStack, Google Drive, OneDrive, and much much more, see the following screenshot as one of the steps in the Create Backup Plan wizard. Going through the wizard leads to… Supported Cloud ServicesĬloudBerry supports a wide range of cloud storage services, i.e. If you don’t have one yet, simply click on the “ I do not have activation code” link, which will get you in the tool.ĬloudBerry Cloud Free only lets you back up files or folders on your computer but it offers three backup options for you to choose, all pretty self-explanatory.Įach option has a wizard designed to create a corresponding backup plan.
#CLOUDBERRY BACKUP RESTORE ACTIVATION CODE#
If this is the first time you launch the tool, you may be prompted with an activation screen asking for an Activation code to start using the Freeware. The tool automatically launches once the installation is completed.
#CLOUDBERRY BACKUP RESTORE INSTALL#
Once downloaded, double-click the executable file you just downloaded and follow through the wizard to install the tool. You will then need to provide your email address on the download page to start downloading the tool. Head over to CloudBerry Backup Windows Desktop edition web page, click the Download button. We will just focus on the Freeware version in this post. One of these products is designed for Windows Desktop that comes with two versions, Freeware and Pro versions.

#CLOUDBERRY BACKUP RESTORE SOFTWARE#
My initial thought would be to keep 30 days from modification date, always keep last version, and 3 versions, and delete 30 days after as well so we aren't dealing with too much data retention.CloudBerry Lab is a cross-platform cloud backup software vendor that offers a wide variety of products to back up your data to the cloud storage of your choice. What is everyone's retention policies for B2 and delete policies?

Well this ended up being $20 for 2 days worth of backups. With my ~800GB of data to backup, this is just less than $1/mo where B2 is $4/mo. PSS - If Google Archival storage is a waste of time and i should just go for B2 that's fine, I'm just trying to keep costs as low as possible. PS - the /flash mapping to /boot no longer works anymore it seems, the flash folder is empty inside the container.
#CLOUDBERRY BACKUP RESTORE FULL#
I also have daily block level backups with monly forced full backups. I have my retention policy setup like this, would this be accurate to get the best "bang for my buck" with their storage then since I'm paying for 365 days of storage per file anyways? My understanding with Google Archival storage is pricing is only $0.0012/GB/mo, very cheap.īut any file that touches the service you automatically pay for storage for a full year on. That being said, I'm trying to use it with Google Archival Storage, I think I'd like to also supplement with a local backup disk some day as well so I do not have to rely on Google Cloud for restores unless a disaster strikes. I'm going to try using this to get away from CrashPlan (I have INotify limits and high resource usage with CP Pro daily, and my pricing finally went up to $10/mo a while back)
