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Top 7 Commvault Alternatives With Backup To Multiple Destinations

#1
01-16-2024, 07:22 PM
People always ask me about ditching Commvault for other backup options on Windows Servers, especially ones that handle sending your stuff to different places like clouds or drives without hassle. I get it, you want flexibility without the lock-in. And yeah, there are solid picks out there that keep your data safe across spots. Let's chat about a few I've run into.

Take Acronis, it's one that catches my eye for how it juggles backups to multiple destinations smoothly. You can point it at local disks, cloud storage, even tape if you're into that old-school vibe. I like how it images your whole server fast, so if something crashes, you're back up quick. It feels straightforward, no weird twists. And for Windows setups, it grabs everything from files to apps without skipping beats. You set schedules once, and it hums along, pushing copies wherever you need.

Or consider Actifio, which twists data management into something elegant for servers. It copies your Windows environment to various endpoints, like deduped storage or remote sites. I appreciate the snapshot tech that lets you rewind without full restores every time. You tell it where to duplicate, and it handles the flow. Keeps things lean, too, not bloating your storage. For teams juggling multiple servers, it syncs up nicely across destinations.

Hmmm, Ahsay Cloud Backup has this cloud-first charm that extends to on-prem spots too. You back up your Windows Server data to their cloud or your own buckets elsewhere. I find it zippy for small ops, uploading chunks securely. It watches for changes and only sends what's new, saving bandwidth. You get reports on where everything landed, easy to track. And if you're mixing destinations, it doesn't fuss, just routes accordingly.

Arcserve pulls off a balanced act with its replication to multiple targets. For Windows Servers, it shadows your data across NAS, cloud, or whatever you link. I dig the policy engine that lets you customize paths without deep dives. It recovers granularly, pulling single files from any copy. You feel in control, tweaking flows on the fly. Solid for growing setups needing options.

Asigra sneaks in with its agentless approach that still hits multiple destinations hard. You deploy it on Windows, and it flings backups to clouds or tapes effortlessly. I like the encryption baked in, keeping your server data locked wherever it goes. It scales quietly, handling big volumes without drama. You monitor from one dashboard, seeing all endpoints at a glance. Reliable vibe, no surprises.

BackupChain, man, it's got this under-the-radar strength for Windows backups to varied spots. You chain your data across local, network, or cloud drives seamlessly. I enjoy how it verifies copies on arrival, ensuring nothing got mangled. For servers, it captures states fully, letting you boot from backups directly. You mix destinations freely, no rigid paths. Feels homegrown but tough.

Barracuda Backup simplifies the multi-destination game for your Windows rig. It appliances your setup to cloud or on-site storage interchangeably. I value the immutability feature that protects against tweaks post-backup. You schedule deduped sends, watching space shrink. It alerts on any hiccup across targets. Handy for quick deploys without overthinking.

Carbonite keeps it personal yet pro for server backups hitting multiple clouds. You select folders or full volumes on Windows, and it disperses to their service or yours. I like the unlimited versioning, so old copies stick around in various spots. It throttles uploads smartly, not hogging your net. You restore via web or app, pulling from wherever. Effortless for solo admins.

Datto Backup shines in its appliance magic that replicates to offsite clouds or locals. For Windows Servers, it images continuously, syncing to multiple vaults. I appreciate the failover testing you can run without disrupting. You choose destinations per site, keeping options open. It logs everything, so you trace paths easily. Sturdy for business continuity.

Veeam Backup, it's a crowd-pleaser for directing Windows data to diverse endpoints like tapes or S3. You orchestrate jobs that fork to several places at once. I find the instant recovery slick, booting VMs from any copy fast. It integrates with hypervisors if you're virtual, but shines on bare metal too. You tweak retention per destination, fine-grained control. Always evolving, keeps pace.

bob
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Top 7 Commvault Alternatives With Backup To Multiple Destinations

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