sending backups to a remote system and having the server to do this is the optimal solution,
but some home users like me do not have setup a second system plus secure remote connection somewhere else (not yet at least).
In this case rotating USB drives that are kept elsewhere is the next best solution.
In this case using a client machine to do the backups has some advantages
- it is easy and straightforward for less knowledgeable like me
- it easy for people without any knowledge to get access to the data (like my kids in case I go away)
- sometimes by doing it manually, it happened for me to spot mistakes, like missing files from the NAS, I mean files I forgot to upload to the NAS etc.
For me it is also a safety net in case I did configuration mistakes in setting up the snapshot replication.
So I use both snapshot replication and the client SMB methods.
@ChrisRJ
almost same backup here, I rotate 3 USB disks, 1 with replicated snapshots and 2 using the SyncBackSE program on a windows PC
but some home users like me do not have setup a second system plus secure remote connection somewhere else (not yet at least).
In this case rotating USB drives that are kept elsewhere is the next best solution.
In this case using a client machine to do the backups has some advantages
- it is easy and straightforward for less knowledgeable like me
- it easy for people without any knowledge to get access to the data (like my kids in case I go away)
- sometimes by doing it manually, it happened for me to spot mistakes, like missing files from the NAS, I mean files I forgot to upload to the NAS etc.
For me it is also a safety net in case I did configuration mistakes in setting up the snapshot replication.
So I use both snapshot replication and the client SMB methods.
@ChrisRJ
almost same backup here, I rotate 3 USB disks, 1 with replicated snapshots and 2 using the SyncBackSE program on a windows PC