They gave everyone plenty of notice: if you already use it, you can keep using it until October 2018. Last year, CrashPlan withdrew its free home-user service. kept itself to itself, without getting in your way or justifying its existence by ‘scaring’ you into paying more for services you didn’t need.would email a weekly summary to let you know how things are going.would email to let you know if your PC hadn’t backed up for 3 days – and then again after 5 days.allowed you to backup to someone else’s computer, free – meaning offsite backups didn’t need a paid subscription.allowed you to make local backups – on a USB drive or second PC.kept revisions of files – so you could restore a version of a file from last week if you accidentally overwrote it.could make an offsite backup – keeping a copy of data away from your PC.created an automatic backup – you didn’t need to do anything to keep it running.was free to use for home users and simple small business use.I have, for many years, recommended that people use CrashPlan to backup the data on their PC.
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