Quickbooks backup seagate external hard drive
- QUICKBOOKS BACKUP SEAGATE EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE FULL
- QUICKBOOKS BACKUP SEAGATE EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE SOFTWARE
- QUICKBOOKS BACKUP SEAGATE EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE PC
NAS-B : Backup repository for File server & Other servers & Clients (Veeam Agent for Windows free) & DC-2
QUICKBOOKS BACKUP SEAGATE EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE SOFTWARE
Then if you do not need print servers if you have network printers unless you have some sort of secure print or follow-me-print or printing accounting software ?
QUICKBOOKS BACKUP SEAGATE EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE PC
Why not just buy 2 Synology NAS and set up 2x Domain Controllers ? Overall, it can be cheaper than your PC & Server 2019 license for the VM (You do know you need server OS licenses & Server CALs for all your users and devices if you use server OSes) ? As DCs are rathe time sensitive, we normally backup to recover deleted or corrupted Domain Objects while using 2 or more DCs to replicate to each other as a form of redundancy. It is always recommended to have at least 2 DCs in every network. Have the concept or recommendation of "Never recover Domain Controllers" came across ? Plus the internet in their area wouldn't allow for a multi-GB size VM to be uploaded within a reasonable time frame. Hence a basic AD server with no real data storage and only backing up the VM itself for quick restore.
QUICKBOOKS BACKUP SEAGATE EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE FULL
When we discussed a full blown Dell server today, they decided that was too much for their needs, as they are coming from a home / family based business where everyone uses their own home laptops with no cloud/backup whatsoever. However, my client will be storing their actual business data in Office305 / cloud. However they are leaning to QB online so essentially the server would just be an AD, DNS, DHCP, and print server.Īs for the 3-2-1 backup rule, I totally agree with that. Outside of the Quickbooks possibility, there would be no other documents stored on that server at all. The whole VM would be backed up so that if the higher end PC / server crashed (failed mobo, etc) the VM could be deployed back out to a whole different replacement unit as needed. That's where the backup drive / NAS would come into play.
I would greatly appreciate any thoughts or input everyone has!ĪaronJBerger Their server would only be used for active directory authentication purposes and that would be running as a VM. So the backup would be to backup the VM nightly using the Veeam Community Edition. They may or may NOT use Quickbooks locally, they haven't decided yet. They will be using mostly cloud everything for Office365, including the cloud storage included in that. I would plan on having a mirrored Raid in the server and for the backup. I know these would be simply mirrored backups which would be ok. Does Seagate provide any Raid based options? I was thinking a WD MyBook Duo as an option.
Cost wise, I don't want this to be a break the bank for the company, but want to give them solid backups. To provide backup, I've been debating between NAS and a RAID based USB/external hard drive. The server will be a higher end PC with the server software running Hyper-V on the bare metal side and a single Server 2019 Standard VM handling HD and basic print server needs. I need to setup a small Win2019 Active Directory server for a local construction company.