The cost of service-based offsite backup hosting is also kind of fucked, as I found out when looking into some of the logistics required to make the jump to Linux. Turns out all the services that offer "we'll offer storage to back up your shit for $X/month" quickly turn into "We'll offer Y TB of storage for $X/month" real quick once they realize you're tech savvy enough to wander outside of a Windows ecosystem. Ballpark numbers are about $7 per TB/month. Anyone who's serious about backing up their stuff is going to have that bill balloon to an exorbitant price tag pretty damn fast. I'm looking at close to $600 per year just to back up my main tower, which is nuts and a non-zero part of my decision to stop exploring the switch to Linux. Can I afford it? Yes. Is it a reasonable price tag for a consumer level service? Not really. I'll stick to my $100/year plan that keeps me locked into the OS I was already using thanks.
The cost of service-based offsite backup hosting is also kind of fucked, as I found out when looking into some of the logistics required to make the jump to Linux. Turns out all the services that offer "we'll offer storage to back up your shit for $X/month" quickly turn into "We'll offer Y TB of storage for $X/month" real quick once they realize you're tech savvy enough to wander outside of a Windows ecosystem. Ballpark numbers are about $7 per TB/month. Anyone who's serious about backing up their stuff is going to have that bill balloon to an exorbitant price tag pretty damn fast. I'm looking at close to $600 per year just to back up my main tower, which is nuts and a non-zero part of my decision to stop exploring the switch to Linux. Can I afford it? Yes. Is it a reasonable price tag for a consumer level service? Not really. I'll stick to my $100/year plan that keeps me locked into the OS I was already using thanks.