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I just signed up for Backblaze, an unlimited online backup facility. I hope Crystal Web doesn't hate me if 7TB of usage comes out of my household this month (6TB backups + the usual 1TB usage).
40-50Mbps ??Ha, once you see how slow the uploads will be...
Ha, once you see how slow the uploads will be...
Ha, once you see how slow the uploads will be...
They do, but they're not magic. Play around with it a bit and see for yourself.[/QUOTE]So the performance options in the settings don't work then?
I Googled and Backblaze claims they can max out any connection. Seems retarded that a backup service not be proficient in the art of uploading.
Is CrashPlan any better? I'm not too gutted if it turns out that Backblaze sucks, as my 6 month account was part of the latest Humble Bundle and the entire lot only cost me R65.
So the performance options in the settings don't work then? I Googled and Backblaze claims they can max out any connection. Seems retarded that a backup service not be proficient in the art of uploading.
Is CrashPlan any better? I'm not too gutted if it turns out that Backblaze sucks, as my 6 month account was part of the latest Humble Bundle and the entire lot only cost me R65.
What are you planning to backup? Videos? I suggest you have a look at encfs + their b2 cli.
Some questions if you're not tooo busy: What is the latency like to London gaming severs? Is there shaping on capped accounts?
How long are web browsing traffic logs kept for? What other kind of logging do you guys implement apart from access tel nos/dates/times/bandwidth usage? Is P2p shaped?
Apologies for all the questions - thinking of moving providers.
They are a fair number of video files. 6TB on their B2 would cost $30pm. I'd sooner just pay $60 a year for Amazon Unlimited storage. I'm not looking for general online storage anyway - I'm covered for that with Google Drive and OneDrive (I use Office 365, which includes 1TB). I just want everything backed up. Can't beat $5pm.
I'm not directly referring to B2 itself. B2 cli link is just a command line uploader for backblaze. If my "assumption" is correct about what type of media (Applies to personal) you are going to upload. It's best to make sure it's encrypted before you upload, that's where encfs comes into play. There's been plenty of stories from Amazon side where chat support employees just entered user's drives. That could very much apply for backblaze.
Backblaze allows you to set your own encryption passphrase too, so even if someone gets your account password, your account 2FA element they will still need your decryption key which only you know.
@Bryn
How are the speeds so far?
Thanks, I'll look into that.
It's not quite as fast as it was at my previous address (97Mbps), but considering it's over 90Mbps and that upload speed has since doubled on Openserve, I'm super happy:
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Good to see, and on Backblaze? Also, have you tried another ISP to test whether the 94Mbs limit is CW or an improperly configured line?
My free 1GB Afrihost account doesn't work at all on my fibre line. I've got Backblaze running right now, and even with all settings optimised for max speed I'm getting a paltry 14Mbps. I don't know if that's a fair reflection of their software though, as the number of files being uploaded every second is pretty high. Maybe you can only go so fast when uploading small files. I'm hoping it hits 40+Mbps for large files.
Nope, that is the speed you will get on large and small files. Good luck uploading all that data @ that speed![]()
I've submitted a ticket, so I'll see what they say and if there's something I'm not doing right. It's not so much the upload speed that would be a deal breaker for me, as I don't really care if it takes over a month to get all my data backed up in the cloud. The problem is that I wouldn't have faith in the download speed, and there's no way I would tolerate anything but line speed if I needed to download my data.
If Backblaze can't improve their speed then I'll invest in a 10TB hard drive and just make do with local backups only.
The download speeds are usually much better, reason being that Backblaze's customers mostly upload data, so the downloads run much faster as less users are slamming their servers.