Best way to manage data for non technical user
Discussion
TLDR - what's current best practice to store important data for non-technical users ?
We have a family NAS with all the important files on it, which get a cloud backup, plus media. One of the Newcettes has moved into her own place, and wants something similar but absolutely does not want to be faffing around with the tech. While I am happy to set things up initially it must be something where all breakdowns can be fixed by 'have you tried turning it off and on again'.
There won't be any need to re-sync her stuff back into the family datastore. She uses Apple laptop, Android phone. None of the data will interest the NSA but it does have personal info in it so some kind of encryption for anything online would be welcome.
Are these the options ?
1 - move her entirely into cloud, Apple / Google, etc. Simplest user experience but lot of redundant storage of media files. Not encrypted unless individual files are before upload ? .
2 - replicate existing setup, Synology and automated cloud backup. Great till something goes wrong.
3 - weekly backup to memory stick. Needs user interaction, can't automate.
4 - split the stores. Media files and anything disposable sit on a cheap NAS with no backup, and all her data sits in the cloud.
Any fancy new approaches which I am not aware of ?
We have a family NAS with all the important files on it, which get a cloud backup, plus media. One of the Newcettes has moved into her own place, and wants something similar but absolutely does not want to be faffing around with the tech. While I am happy to set things up initially it must be something where all breakdowns can be fixed by 'have you tried turning it off and on again'.
There won't be any need to re-sync her stuff back into the family datastore. She uses Apple laptop, Android phone. None of the data will interest the NSA but it does have personal info in it so some kind of encryption for anything online would be welcome.
Are these the options ?
1 - move her entirely into cloud, Apple / Google, etc. Simplest user experience but lot of redundant storage of media files. Not encrypted unless individual files are before upload ? .
2 - replicate existing setup, Synology and automated cloud backup. Great till something goes wrong.
3 - weekly backup to memory stick. Needs user interaction, can't automate.
4 - split the stores. Media files and anything disposable sit on a cheap NAS with no backup, and all her data sits in the cloud.
Any fancy new approaches which I am not aware of ?
We use OneDrive and have a business set up but I suspect this could be done with most other options.
Set the data folder to be both on the cloud and locally on the device.
Then we backup via Time Machine.
We also have the data store shared to myself and my wife so it s present on 3-4 machines with 2-3 Time Machine backups.
I m assuming she could share her data with yourself and allow you to hold a local copy and also back that up via your nas device.
You could also consider syncthings and replicate to a google drive or drop box and also Time Machine the device.
It really depends on how much data is on the phone only
Set the data folder to be both on the cloud and locally on the device.
Then we backup via Time Machine.
We also have the data store shared to myself and my wife so it s present on 3-4 machines with 2-3 Time Machine backups.
I m assuming she could share her data with yourself and allow you to hold a local copy and also back that up via your nas device.
You could also consider syncthings and replicate to a google drive or drop box and also Time Machine the device.
It really depends on how much data is on the phone only
Edited by Captain_Morgan on Sunday 27th July 16:37
Thought I would come back with what we did eventually, in case useful for anyone else.
I installed Synology's Cloudsync onto the NAS, and pointed it at a specific folder.
The NAS logs in to my GDrive account, where I have created a new folder, and two-way syncs the two locations.
I gave the daughter's gmail account read/write access to the GDrive folder.
She then runs Google Drive Desktop on her laptop, and points it a specific folder on her Mac.
The GDrive desktop two-way syncs the Mac and the GDrive folders.
Anything put into the specific folder on either the NAS or the Mac appears in the other location in pretty much real time.
She also has a WD external hard disk on her desk, with a one-time copy of the NAS. Obviously that will not keep in sync, or be backed up, but that doesn't matter.
No tech support needed after the initial set up, all very easy.
Thanks again for everyone's suggestions, was very helpful.
I installed Synology's Cloudsync onto the NAS, and pointed it at a specific folder.
The NAS logs in to my GDrive account, where I have created a new folder, and two-way syncs the two locations.
I gave the daughter's gmail account read/write access to the GDrive folder.
She then runs Google Drive Desktop on her laptop, and points it a specific folder on her Mac.
The GDrive desktop two-way syncs the Mac and the GDrive folders.
Anything put into the specific folder on either the NAS or the Mac appears in the other location in pretty much real time.
She also has a WD external hard disk on her desk, with a one-time copy of the NAS. Obviously that will not keep in sync, or be backed up, but that doesn't matter.
No tech support needed after the initial set up, all very easy.
Thanks again for everyone's suggestions, was very helpful.
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