| CrashPlan+ Unlimited Retail Price for 1 Year: | $49.99 |
| 1 Year Plan Savings (10%): | $5.00 |
| Your Price for 1 Year: | $44.99 |
| CrashPlan+ Family Unlimited Retail Price for 1 Year: | $119.00 |
| 1 Year Plan Savings (10%): | $12.00 |
| Your Price for 1 Year: | $107.99 |
CrashPlan at a Glance
Our Rating
4 / 5 stars




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Price:
CrashPlan+
- 10GB: $2.50/month, $24.99/year, $44.99/two years, $59.99/three years, $69.99/four years
- Unlimited GB: $5.00/month, $49.99/year, $89.99/two years, $119.99/three years, $139.99/four years
- Family Plan Unlimited GB: $12.00/month, $119.99/year, $199.99/two years, $269.99/three years, $287.99/four years
- Click here to save 10% on CrashPlan!
Pros:
- Runs on Windows, Mac and Linux
- Local backup
- Unlimited File Size
- Locked File Backup
- Backup email reports
- Seeded Backup
- Mobile apps now available.
Cons:
- Options can be confusing
- No Sharing
- No virtual drive
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Latest Posts / Deals about CrashPlan
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- Online Backup Gift Giving
Full CrashPlan Review
CrashPlan offers a myriad of options to backing up your data. Backup to another local drive, another computer, a friends computer or online to CrashPlans servers. Add to that the ability to run on Windows, Macs and Linux machines and you have a backup service that appears to do it all.
Installation
Installation of CrashPlan varies depending on the operating system you are on. For Windows users installation is pretty straight forward. Download the Windows application from the CrashPlan website and double click the installation package to install. Mac installs are not much different. Linux installs require some command line work, but most Linux users are probably comfortable enough to handle getting it installed. The CrashPlan website does offer decent instructions to help people get the software installed.
Backing Up
After the software is installed it does automatically select the most common folders and files to start backing up. All you have to do it click the Start Backup button and the desktop client will start backing up to the CrashPlan Central servers. If you want more control over your backup you can choose what folders and files to backup and where to back them up to. You get to choose a destination including online, another computer, a local folder or even a friends computer that has Crashplan installed.
If you are backing up to CrashPlan servers and if you have a lot of data to backup you can seed the backup by getting a hard drive shipped to you and then sending it back. This can reduce your bandwidth use considerably and make your initial backup go much faster than just uploading it over the Internet.
With CrashPlan being able to upload data to different destinations, you can select which folders and files you want to backup to which destination. This is an interesting feature and could be useful if you want to make sure certain data is backed up to different places. Music to one place, videos to another etc. This could be useful if you want a different backup schedule for different files but it could add an extra layer of confusion for some users.
Other backup features include items like automatic or scheduled backups, locked file support, encryption and compression and file versions.
Restoring
Restoring your data is just as important as backing it up. There is no point backing up your data if you can’t get it back. CrashPlan offers several ways to restore your data, through the client, through the web and through a hard drive or DVD.
Restoring from local backup locations requires the desktop client to do so. The reason for this is because all local backups are encrypted and compressed so copying files out of the backup directly is not possible. While not a difficult thing to do it does mean you need to remember to download and install the desktop client if your computer crashes and you need to restore your data. It also means you need to remember your account password or you could have a harder time restoring even your local backups.
You can also have your restore shipped to you on a hard drive of DVD. If you have to restore all of your files this can be a great option. Remember though this is at an additional cost, but can be well worth the cost if you have lost all your data.
Like most online backup services you can restore your data through the web. Simply login to the web site, click computers and select your files for your restore. There is a file size limit of 250mb per restore so if you have a large restore you could be at this for awhile.
Other Features
Backup to a Friend – This is something unique to CrashPlan. Have a friend that has tons of hard drive space and using CrashPlan you can backup offsite to your friends computer. You could create your own cloud backup and by pass the CrashPlan central server altogether and backup only to your friends.
Overall
I really want to like CrashPlan, it has a feature set that should set it high above many of the other online backup services, but there is something about the software that turns me off. I even did something I rarely do, I asked my wife to look at the software to see if she could easily backup some files. Her immediate reaction was confusion about the number of options to backup the files. I did not even try to ask her to restore any. For experienced computer users backing up using CrashPlan might be a great choice, but for the average person needing an easy to use backup system to keep their photos, videos and files safe CrashPlan presents to many options.
I also had several problems with the software becoming unresponsive and causing my test machine to need a reboot. Not sure what the cause of the problem was but it was often enough that I decided to try running a Linux version instead. While running the free version on Linux I did not run into any of those issues so perhaps it was something unique to my Windows XP test system.
Update: I recently installed CrashPlan on a Windows 7 computer and had none of the problems I had on my initial test.




























[...] AppCode 42 Software Introduces CrashPlan PRO for SMBsBy John Tucker | Published: June 29, 2011ShareCode 42 Software and CrashPlan are the latest to start to offer a backup service for small and [...]
[...] UsYou are here: Home » Blog » CrashPlan » How to Backup Using CrashPlan PRO « Code 42 Software Introduces CrashPlan PRO for SMBsHow to Backup Using CrashPlan PROBy John Tucker | Published: July 3, 2011ShareCrashPlan PRO just [...]
Someone can share his experience on restore from CrashPlan for file >1Gb online?
I’m looking for replacement from Mozy and I am quite lost
- Most are too expensive for >300Gb of data
- Livedrive briefcase seems perfect, even after trial. Except for privacy (no passphrase,
means if I understand correctly Livedrive is able to decrypt your data)
But no big secret to hide… More personal photos not to loose… Share was a +
Then I read all comments in multiple forum and dropped it, seems unacceptable service…
- AVG was my second choice, but during trial, going to advance mode to select folder/file
individually and was really unusable… + the 500Gb limit after what they can take
what they want from your Visa, it’s too much…
- B that doesn’t allow you to save special files (.exe…) I don’t want to care …
- Carbonite, seems to have many issues in forums too (less than Livedrive, but still blocking)
- CrashPlan seems very good for backup, but absolutely unusable for restore (limit to 250Mo), what
is the goal to save online if you can’t restore, seems stange to me?
Becoming crazy :’(
So if I could get confident on restore method (for online, offline I don’t need CrashPlan for that), I would go for it…
By the way, this site is really the best summary/review/comments and advices I have found.
Thanks!
First off thank you! Appreciate the complement.
Correct the CrashPlan web restore has a 250mb limit, but their client restore does not. So only if you need to do a large restore through the web should you have any problems. The desktop client can do a larger restore.
For the amount of data you need to backup Backblaze and CrashPlan are going to be your best value. The limit in Backblaze about .exe files can be removed in Version 2 although it is set as the default to not backup .exe files.
Sometimes the best method is to just try them out. Both have free trials. Good luck in your search.
You mentioned “no virtual drive” among the cons. What does that mean exactly?
Good question. Some services, like Mozy and Carbonite, offer a “virtual drive” that appears like an additional hard drive on your computer that allows you to browse the files in your backup as they were actually on your computer. You can then simply copy and paste folders and files from your backup to your computer. It makes it really easy to do small restores can be very convenient. CrashPlan does not offer that level of integration with an operating system.
Below is an example of what the Mozy virtual drive looks like from a screenshot I have.
