I recently abandoned iDrive in favor of Crashplan, and so far I'm very happy with it. You can either restore the most recent backup image (which won't include the file) or you can go back in time to restore the file before it was deleted. Other services (including Crashplan) handle this much better by treating deletions as just another "version" of the file. In spite of setting iDrive to "clean" my backup every two weeks, a recent restoration brought back files that I had deleted MONTHS ago.)īasically you have two equally awful and dysfunctional choices about how to handle moved and deleted files. (And worse: in my experience this doesn't even seem to work properly. That gets rids of them forever, so now you have no protection at all against accidentally deleted files. Your only alternative is to let iDrive occasionally go through and "clean" the moved/deleted files from your backup set. If you ever need to fully restore your file system, you'll get back every file you ever had and moved or deleted, and you'll be stuck rooting through your file system to get rid of all those files again (and do you really remember every file you've moved around or deleted in the past three years?). By default, your backup is the union of every file you've ever had on your machine in every place you've ever had it. The way that iDrive handles deleted (or relocated) files is utterly horrible. I'm a little surprised that you think at all highly of iDrive and don't note what I consider to be the single most atrocious feature of it, and a total dealbreaker. I was seriously considering iDrive, but then came across this from a month ago via the comments section in
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