

iDrive similar with NAS support but limited to 10 TB. Not sure if that helps, but that's my experience anyway.Thanks for chiming in, I am hoping someone would mention a cloud backup service that works with NAS and at a lower cost than Backblaze B2 - B2 works out to about $900 a year, and with Backblaze personal, $70 a year but no NAS support. Not sure if that helps, but that's my experience anyway. Of course I could see how if you're pushing your computer to the max you'd not want to do backups at the same time of course. It seems to be a fairly "stealthy" process running mostly in the background. So I have my Backblaze set to back up automatically early evening and that has so far never interfered with my work or leisure. In my case my work computer at home is also the "entertainment" computer so I use it for streaming video and audio and browsing. So if you create 2GB worth of new content then the computer only has to be running long enough to back that up. After that you only need to account for incremental updates.

However, if you have a good upload speed you only have to suffer through that in the beginning when you back up the initial full data set of 15TB.

I was sort of in the same situation and was worried about uploading all that data from the internal drives because as you said it meant leaving the system up and running. It seems you have all the information you need really.
