What kind of backup/sorts of data/amount of data are you dealing with?  What
kind of network connectivity do you have?  What kind of budget are you
talking about (I assume by "personal" you also want "not too expensive")?

I've been happy with using Dropbox for most of my data that requires a
backup (music, photos, documents, etc.)  On writes, it all just magically
gets synced to their machines (anything sensitive I encrypt), and I can
easily retrieve the data either via web or on another machine if necessary.
 I also get file syncing for free between machines (great for those music +
photos).

I've also (in the past) been pretty happy with Crashplan.  I was using the
personal version (free), letting multiple machines backup to one of my own
servers, though it's also possible to use Crashplan's storage backend too.
 It's also possible to let multiple people backup to each other, so one
thing I had considered was to let family members backup their data to my
server, versus their either a) no backups (most common), b) flash
drive/external hard drive/dvd-rw, or c) something else like carbonite/etc.
 Each Crashplan client encrypts the data before sending it, so privacy isn't
a big issue.

All this said, my amount of "needs backup" data is < 50G with a small amount
of churn.  Backing up "to the cloud" works pretty well, and also depends on
network connectivity.  For example, I decided to upgrade my home connection
to have higher upload bandwidth, otherwise it was taking a long time to
upload newly ripped CDs, and more importantly, the encrypted disk images
where I store sensitive data (which changes frequently while using the data
inside the image).


On Fri, Apr 8, 2011 at 11:57 AM, Anne Cross <[email protected]> wrote:

> I'm looking to update my personal backup system.  At the moment, I'm
> running an old version of JungleDisk, and backing up to the Amazon S3
> cloud, but it's old enough that I'm starting to get failures.
>
> Rather than shell out for the new version of JungleDisk from Rackspace
> blindly, I thought I'd ask what folks recommend?  I'd go with Backblaze,
> but they don't have a Linux client and don't have plans to build one in
> the immediate future.
>
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