


This is often known as disaster recovery and isn't a replacement for something like Dropbox that you might be familiar with. I want to make long term backups of my data, the kind of backups that you only use if something goes seriously wrong like your NAS drive has a catastrophic failure or your house burns down. I won't be talking about Multi-Regional or Regional storage here as they aren't suited to the kind of backups I want to make. The Cloud Storage offering is going to be the focus of this article and there are 4 different types of storage you can use. I may write up a little more on some of the other things I've been playing around with but this blog is about Cloud Storage and how you can leverage it for insanely easy backup. Their UI is clean, their services are fully featured and the pricing is incredibly competitive. I've been keeping an eye on Google Cloud Platform recently as they've been doing some really interesting things in the cloud hosting space. Get a good backup solution in place now before you need it and hope that you never need to use it. The solution to all of these problems is backups. More recently we also have to contend with the threat of ransomware too, nasty software that once it infects your PC will encyrpt all of your files and only allow you to decrypt them when you pay a fee. All of their precious pictures on their phone are lost forever when they lose the device. They store their entire life on their PC and the HDD suddenly dies one day. Hopefully the reasons to backup your data are fairly clear but so often I see people wanting to create backups in the aftermath of an event where they've lost all or most of their data.
Backing up your stuff is now cheap, easy and secure. These stories usually start with 'my phone/laptop broke and I lost all of my stuff' or more recently 'I got ransomware'. Keeping backups of your data is increasingly more important in our digital and connected world but I regularly hear stories of people that don't.
