PC Pro

IDrive Personal

This cloud service is good value and easy to use – and it can take care of your local backup needs too

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PRICE $52 per year from idrive.com

The IDrive client isn’t exactly ugly, but it looks like it was put together by a programmer rather than a profession­al designer. Still, it’s admirably functional: nearly all of its tools are accessible directly from the main window, via an obvious button with a clear text label.

It helps that IDrive isn’t overloaded with features. It’s first and foremost a cloud backup system, and that means the specifics of backup strategies, compressio­n and so forth are handled invisibly by the service. Indeed, once you’ve chosen which files and folders you want to back up, IDrive immediatel­y starts quietly uploading them without asking any further questions at all. Even multi-computer deployment­s are effortless to set up: simply install a second copy of the software on a Windows PC or Mac and IDrive will then automatica­lly create a separate archive within your cloud account for that device.

If you prefer to take a more hands-on approach, there are a few settings you can tweak, including the backup scheduler. By default, IDrive continuall­y watches your nominated backup folders and uploads all modified files smaller than 500MB as soon as changes are detected, with a full backup every day. You can change the frequency of (as well as disable) both processes; there’s no option to perform a full backup less often than once a week, but perhaps you shouldn’t be backing up that infrequent­ly anyway.

As is usual in cloud backup software, you can also exclude specific files and folders from your selection, as well as limit IDrive’s bandwidth and CPU usage to a percentage of your choice, and enable email notificati­ons to confirm successful or failed backups. Really, though, that’s about it, and for everyday backups that’s probably all you’ll need. IDrive automatica­lly stores up to 30 historical versions of modified files, and if you get low on cloud storage you can use the Archive Cleanup wizard to remove old files that are no longer present on your local hard disk – but we’d recommend that you use this with caution, as you could end up purging accidental­ly deleted files, leaving you with no way to recover them.

At any rate, you shouldn’t find yourself too short on space. The $52 annual subscripti­on – equivalent to around £41 – gets you a roomy 5TB of storage in IDrive’s data centre, and while this is located the US, we found file transfers were surprising­ly swift: our 2GB test archive zoomed across the Atlantic in 29mins 5secs, which was more than five minutes ahead of second-place Carbonite. And if you’re worried about US agencies spying on your data, you can optionally specify your own private encryption key – subject to the usual warning that, if you lose it, there’s no way to recover your backed-up data.

If this were all that IDrive did, it would still be a decent choice for online backup. What distinguis­hes the program is that it also – unlike most other cloud backup services – supports local destinatio­ns. This means you can convenient­ly manage your on-site and off-site backups from one place, and set both to execute at whatever intervals you see fit.

Admittedly, the program’s local loca backup capabiliti­es are rather limited. You can only create one local lo backup job, and the destinatio­n has h to be the root directory of an internal, interna external or network drive (a subfolder named IDriveLoca­l is automatica­lly created). You get exactly the same stripped-down set of options as you do when backing up to the cloud, which means that encryption and

“What distinguis­hes the program is that it also – unlike most other cloud backup services – supports local destinatio­ns”

compressio­n are always on. This has implicatio­ns for performanc­e: a full backup of our 2 G B test folder was compacted down to 1.91GB, which is a decent saving, but it took 58 seconds to write to our USB 3 external drive. For subsequent runs, IDrive is smart enough not to re-copy unchanged files, but historical versions of files aren’t kept, nor can you set your own schema of full, incrementa­l and differenti­al backups.

IDrive has a few other features worth mentioning. The sync tool lets you use your cloud storage as a sort of protoDropb­ox, automatica­lly synchronis­ing files across all computers with the IDrive client installed; you can also use IDrive’s web restore capability to easily grab individual files from wherever you happen to be. The Clone and Computer Backup button lets you make an image of your hard disk or operating system, which can be stored either locally or in the cloud and restored to the same PC or onto different hardware. For advanced users, there’s also a surprising­ly sophistica­ted histicated set of server backup options, ions, which permit one-click data store tore backups from Microsoft 365, Hyper-V, SQL Server, VMware and more.

IDrive isn’t flexible enough to suit every role, but for families seeking eeking set-and-forget protection, it t could be just the thing: it’s very easy asy to set up, supports multicompu­ter omputer installati­ons and comes with ith enough storage to protect a whole ole household for a very reasonable onable price.

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 ??  ?? ABOVE If you want a fuss-free solution for your family, it’s time to go for an IDrive
ABOVE If you want a fuss-free solution for your family, it’s time to go for an IDrive

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