PC Pro

Ashampoo Backup Pro 14

When it comes to local backups, this clean suite ticks all the important boxes for a very fair price

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SCORE

PRICE £17 (£20 inc VAT) from ashampoo.com

At £20, Ashampoo’s Backup Pro 14 is one of the cheapest profession­al backup suites around – and it offers a strong set of features. While there’s no native cloud backup, the client makes a great impression right away with integrated support for nine third-party cloud platforms (including Dropbox, Google Drive and OneDrive), as well as WebDAV connection­s.

There’s also support for backing up disk images along with individual files – although the job definition wizard doesn’t make a song and dance about this, only asking which you want to protect after you’ve already chosen a destinatio­n and given your backup set a name.

Successive dialogs then ask you all of the key questions one by one: do you want compressio­n, do you want encryption and so forth. Truth be told, the process feels a little pedantic, but it’s not something you’ll go through on a regular basis. Unusually, you can apply multiple schedules to the same job, meaning you can (for example) create a backup task that runs every Friday and also on the first of the month.

You can also choose whether you want to store your backup in Ashampoo’s proprietar­y database format or as a clone of the file structure. The former is more space-efficient, but the latter means you can browse your backed-up files in Windows. If you combine this setting with compressio­n, each file is stored as a standalone ZIP archive.

Another very welcome feature is version management: Ashampoo lets you choose whether to replace old versions of files immediatel­y or store them for up to 3,650 days. Historical versions can be viewed and restored via a date and time selector in the Restore window – a convenienc­e that few backup systems can match.

For disk backup jobs, you can additional­ly define a cycle of full and incrementa­l backups, and specify how long the backup chain can get before the oldest data is wiped. There’s no option to create differenti­al backups, however, nor to consolidat­e incrementa­l archives.

In all, Ashampoo Backup Pro 14 doesn’t really fall down in any area – except speed. No matter what settings we applied, it was this month’s slowest backup system, taking a slovenly 163 seconds to copy our 2GB test folder to an external hard drive, and nearly six minutes to send it to the NAS appliance. Still, given that most backups run in the background, those slow results shouldn’t ruin what is a very competent package at a great price.

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 ??  ?? ABOVE While it’s no speed merchant, this is a capable option at a wallet-friendly price
ABOVE While it’s no speed merchant, this is a capable option at a wallet-friendly price

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