I’ll detail in the review where the Mac client falls short. For this review, I focused on the Windows client, because its the most stable and contains the most features. IBackup supports Windows, Linux, and OS X. Workgroup plans ring up at $20/month for 10 GB, or $216/year. They are more expensive than Economy plans for the same amount of storage, and are the most expensive plan in the Standard product lineup. Workgroup plans add more sub-accounts than storage, and are aimed at sharing. Enhanced plans start at 15 GB for $14.95/mo or $149.50/year Enhanced plans over 175 GB can add sub-accounts for additional users. Plans start at 10 GB for $9.95/month or $99.50/yearĮnhanced plans add in the server process back up. Economy plans are the basic backup plan, and provide no support for server processes like Exchange or SQL. With that as background, IBackup Standard comes in three plan flavors: Economy, Enhanced, and Workgroup. These accounts allow you to back up multiple computers to a single account, but provide no data segregation as sub-accounts do. Plans with 50 to 100 GB of storage have five special accounts, and anything over 100 GB gets 10 special accounts. Things get more confusing with the addition of “special accounts”. ![]() Opting for an account where you can add sub-accounts is a flat $5/month per sub-account. However it is very expensive at $2/month per GB used in each sub-account. This means you can connect as many sub-accounts as you want. Many account types have “on-demand” sub-accounts. These are basically additional logins connected to a main account. ![]() As with IDrive, the product lineup is a little confusing because of the way IBackup handles users, or as it calls them "sub-accounts".
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