Friday, April 12, 2013

Review: SyncUp synchronized data, if you are not logged in or

Sync programs are a dime a dozen. But tightly written, easy-to-use and sync programs like SyncUp aren't nearly feature-complete @ Max SyncUp walks the fine line between makes and user friendliness is very good and successful, mainly because it sets options within easy reach, but keep it simple and used as little jargon as possible.

Clean, simple, straightforward. You cannot claim the display option, the options in Max SyncUp or array of them.

SyncUp ($25, 30-day trial) has almost every feature you could ask: backup, file filter, scheduling, and plan both two-way and one-way synchronization, as well as support for domain users, email notifications, FTP servers, networks, and granular. A potential weakness, however, is the lack of online destinations. Google drive is supported, but otherwise nothing. If more than the 5 GB secure the Google drive should be enabled to say Amazon S3, you must look elsewhere.

While SyncUp include as such is not supported, it will hold several older versions of your files. It also synchronized with pure file copy, ZIP archives, or archive to the own proprietary encrypted. The program creates its own service as well as allows scheduled tasks run it, whether you or are not logged in. Nice.

@Max SyncUp supports Google's online storage and FTP servers, but not Amazon S3.

@Max SyncUp is well executed. If you use S3 or other non-Google-online backup or store service, not for you, but otherwise it should be on your shortlist of pay-sync programs, if giveaways such as FreeFileSync do not.

Note: The download button on the product information page will download the software on your system.

Jon L. Jacobi

Jon L. Jacobi has worked with computers, since flipped switches and punch cards to their programming. He studied music Julliard and now he makes his car for kicks mods.
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