The interface seems to be pretty simple to use (though not too good looking), with the list of backup jobs available in the left hand part, together with the configuration choices (tree-view). So basically the program will copy the data to a given location, which you'll have to access manually in order to get your information back. For the paid editions the file restoration function is limited to tape and CD/DVD. You have to know from the beginning that there is no restoration option in the free version of the application. There are also Base, Pro Tape, Pro CD/DVD, Pro SQL and Gold versions, which can be acquired for different fees and bring some specific options such as backing up to FTP/SFTP, mail, tape, MS SQL server database backup, burning to CD/DVD and copying of locked files (Volume Shadow Copy). The software gets off with the Free Edition, which can back up to a hard disk location, mass storage devices or LAN and comes with an FTP/SFTP client. Thus the Gold version, which includes all the features and volume shadow backup, has a little over $400 written on the price card. For the basic features the application comes free of charge and for added functionality you will have to pay. Uranium Backup is a solution that addresses the needs of a large pool of users, starting with the uninitiated and ending with the advanced category that requires special options. Although backing up files may look like a job for professional software, there are plenty solutions on the market ready to take this chore off your hands without giving you the hardest time of your life. With all the data-endangering threats floating all over the Internet, keeping copies of your files in a safe place from where you can recover it at any time in case something goes seriously wrong seems like a great idea.
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