

The files backed up can either be placed as is, on the server in a specific folder where they can be accessed freely. In short, unless you wrote your own Cloud storage facility, CloudBerry will probably work with the one you are currently using. These aren’t all the cloud choices, just the ones it puts at the top of the list.ĬloudBerry supports another 52 services currently, including Wasabi, Google Drive, Azure Files, FTP, Cisco, HP Cloud, Oracle Cloud and Rackspace, to mention just a few. Hybrid is the smart choice if you have an external drive or NAS, as you have a single backup that makes two copies, one being on the cloud.ĭestinations for the backup can be a local file system or the popular choices of Amazon S3, Amazon Glacier, Azure, Backblaze B2, Google Cloud or OpenStack. Once you’ve chosen, you then get to decide is it a local or cloud backup, or a hybrid combination. The first choice it presents you is what type of backup you want, with the options (if you have the licenses) to backup Files, Image-Based, MS SQL Server or MS Exchange. CloudBerry Backup's interface is clean and easy to use (Image Credit: CloudBerry Labs) Featuresĭetailing the features of CloudBerry backup is no easy task, as it slices and dices the job of securing files in so many ways.
