Something that might be worth adding to the list is CrashPlan.  It runs on
Windows, Mac and Linux and has a couple different operating modes, including
a peer to peer mode, where you can backup one of your machines to another
one of your machines (on-site or off-site) for free.  I've been using this
on a handful of Windows machines and it gives me offsite data backup for
zero cost (except for some hard drive space on a remote system.)

Chris

On Wed, Jun 30, 2010 at 9:03 AM, j...@coats.org <j...@coats.org> wrote:

>
> https://docs.google.com/document/edit?id=1T1piy6scxaDHLSmfXt0eCv7amx7ogxZtZUsgcmZs0bA&hl=en
>
> I am following a discussion in BLU (Boston Linux User Group) and collected
> some data on commercial
> 'Linux Friendly' commercial on-line backup vendors.
>
> The link is a collection put in a table on Google Docs from the discussion.
> I also went to the sites and pulled pricing.
>
> If you have some others, please let me know.
>
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