This new version allows you to have it resume a missed daily backup at the earliest opportunity, and the job will automatically be suspended when the computer is running on battery. There have been a number of upgrades related to the scheduling and processing to deal with the realities of backup of end-user devices.
#Veeam backup free schedule pro#
In this latest version on my Surface Pro 4, when backing up to an external USB 3 hard drive, I was able to perform a 4.5 GB incremental backup in about four and a half minutes without really seeing much of a hit in overall system performance. There is new logic with regard to backup file inclusion and exclusion, which is done automatically, much like the bitlooker feature in the latest version of the Veeam Backup & Replication product, as well as with regard to basic performance enhancements. VEB 1.5 also comes with various performance increases as well. In this new version, you can configure e-mail system connectivity in much the same way that you would add a new e-mail address to Outlook via auto discover, and then you can tell it when you want it to notify you of either Success, Warning, or Error, or any combination of the three.
![veeam backup free schedule veeam backup free schedule](https://windows-cdn.softpedia.com/screenshots/Veeam-FastSCP_2.png)
In the end-user device space, this makes sense, but those of us using VEB with servers needed to be notified at a minimum when the job failed.
![veeam backup free schedule veeam backup free schedule](https://www.anoopcnair.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Veeam_EndPoint_Backup_1_5_14.jpg)
What's New in 1.5 ^īy far the biggest complaint I've heard from users I know, as well as from myself, is that there previously wasn't any kind of built-in notification system.
![veeam backup free schedule veeam backup free schedule](https://d8tadude.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/veeam-NAS-components.png)
It is worth noting that at this point, the technical preview of Windows Server 2016 is not yet supported. System support at this point is still the same as for the original version, covering Windows 7 and later on the client side and 208 R2 and later on the server side. In our environment, our biggest use case for the tool is providing a fairly seamless backup solution for the handful of physical servers we still have by running jobs on a regular schedule and pointing them to a VBR repository. While this tool is designed and marketed towards being used for end-user laptops and desktops, it works just fine with Windows servers too.