EaseUS ToDo Backup 10 review

EaseUS ToDo Backup 10 review
easeus5Image: IDG

At a Glance

Expert’s Rating

Pros

Comprehensive file and image backupsUber clean interface and workflowBacks up to Dropbox, Google Drive, and OneDrive

Cons

Help is only available onlineNo plain file sync or mirroring

Our Verdict

EaseUS ToDo Backup has an improved interface and a long list of features. Despite the lack of plain file backup and sync functions, supporting Dropbox and other online locations is a plus.

Best Prices Today: ToDo Backup Home 10.5

RetailerPriceEaseUS$29.99View DealPrice comparison from over 24,000 stores worldwideProductPricePrice comparison from Backmarket

EaseUS ToDo Backup Home 10 may not have the cachet of rival Acronis True Image, but it’s nearly as capable. Perhaps more so for the average user if you count its ability to back up to online services such as Dropbox, Google Drive, and OneDrive. It also supports LTO 4 tape, which alone warrants an upgrade to the program’s $30 price tag if you’re one of the diehards still rocking serial storage.

Note: This review is part of our ongoing roundups of the best free backup software/services and the best Windows backup software. Go to those stories for information on competing products and buying advice.

Design and features

Having not seen ToDo Backup for several full versions, we were pleasantly surprised at the revamped interface. The appearance and organization are far cleaner, and the workflow is more intuitive. Icons are clearly labeled so there’s no guessing what’s what, at least if you understand the jargon. For instance, “mount” refers to opening existing backup images so that they appear as a drive letter, letting you browse their contents in Windows Explorer. Even we didn’t understand what “Include all contents referred to Reparse Point” meant. It should read “referred to by the reparse point,” which means if you have a shortcut to My Documents on your D drive, the contents of the actual My Documents folder will be backed up along with the D drive.

However, beginners might not know such things, and with the help file online you have to open a browser to get an answer. Despite the lack of local help, ToDo Backup’s interface and workflow really grew on us. It’s quite possibly our favorite in the backup realm.

Performance and features

A pretty face is meaningless without some grit behind it. ToDo Backup aced all its imaging tasks (system, disks, single partitions, and sets of files). Backups aren’t particularly fast, but the program outpaced Aomei Backupper easily when backing up files and folders. (Backupper cleaned ToDo’s clock with images.)

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ToDo Backup’s clean-shaven appearance lets you concentrate solely on creating the backup job. Having all the appropriate options within easy reach also helps.

Other features include a drive clone function (Master Boot Record/MBR only, not GUID Partition Table/GPT in our testing) that will optimize sector offset for SSDs; a disk wiping (secure delete) utility; and even an optional boot time recovery, which allows you to select the EaseUS option at a boot prompt and restore your system without a boot disc.

EaseUS provides both Linux and Windows PE boot images that can be burned to CD or installed to a USB drive. You can also write an ISO for burning with another program, or booting from across the network. There’s a Smart Backup, which backs up the Windows system libraries (Documents, Pictures, etc.), and a dedicated email backup function, though it’s limited to Microsoft Outlook.

The one feature ToDo Backup lacks is plain old file copying or syncing. Even when not done in real time as with Aomei Backupper, mirroring important folders is a nice way to keep your most important data handy in case of a system failure or data disaster.

Back up to everywhere

Where ToDo Backup really shines is in the wide variety of backup destinations it supports: hard drives and SSDs, optical discs, tape, network locations, FTP sites, and even DropBox, Google Drive, and OneDrive. You’d be surprised at how much tape and optical remains in the world, if not the consumer space. And online? That’s a great feature that’s also nearly universal on NAS boxes. We’re at a bit of a loss as to why more backup programs don’t support it.

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ToDo Backup supports hard drives, tape, optical disc, networks, FTP, and even online services.

We also appreciate the fact that ToDo Backup creates only a single background process. Rivals such as Aomei, Macrium, and Acronis create several, and too many can substantially slow down system boot times. Keep it clean, lean and mean, we say.

Conclusion

EaseUS ToDo Backup Home is a great backup program, well suited to the home and small/medium business space. Backing up to Dropbox, Google, and OneDrive is a feature that should sell the program to many users—every backup plan should have an off-site component. We’d like to see plain file backup and syncing, but that’s a minor beef.

Note: This article was edited to note that the clone function did not support GUID Partition Table disks in our testing, only those using the older MBR scheme. This contradicts some information on the Easeus Web site.

Best Prices Today: ToDo Backup Home 10.5

RetailerPriceEaseUS$29.99View DealPrice comparison from over 24,000 stores worldwideProductPricePrice comparison from Backmarket

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