I've used Carbonite and Backblaze successfully for years. I'm using only Backblaze now. I had a RAID power supply blow and Backblaze sent me all 4 TB on a USB drive within a couple of days. I had to give them a deposit on the drive but they promptly refunded it when I returned the drive.
There may not be as many Fuji posts because Fuji users, for the most part, are happy with their gear, knowledgeable of their gear and have fewer questions and concerns, complaints and problems about their gear.
I got one from Puget Systems a few years ago. It is by far the best desktop and I've ever used I started in the 80s with DOS 1.0. If you go to their site and select the Content Creators Build you get some decent specifications to use when shopping for another brand. OR, if your budget allows, buy from them. https://www.pugetsystems.com/
I am looking at renting a camera (Canon) body for a wedding my future niece wants me to shoot some pictures for her. The main reason for doing this is so I don't have to switch my lenses all the time. Looking for recommendations for the best sites to rent from. Thanks!
A jpeg is a compressed 8-bit file. A CR2 is a 16-bit file. Watch this to get a better understanding of what everyone is talking about: https://youtu.be/cbZ-gjeYtZo
Congratulations! Any of the Fuji lens are wonderful. If you want to keep the whole package small look at the 23f2, 35f2, 50f2, and the 16f2.8. The 18-50 is underrated and the 16-80 is phenomenal. Checkout the Fujilove Magazine Readers Group on Facebook and any of the Fujirumours Groups (camera specific).
If it is too complicated (has too many features or requires a bit of organizing to take with you) it will get lost in competing attractions.
I gave my grandson my old Fuji X-T1 with a 23mm lens. In retrospect something simpler would have made it easier for him to learn on.
Having made many recommendations to many people at different levels of expertise I've settled on the X100 line of cameras as a great beginner choice. It is a goto carry camera for a lot of Pros and it is easy to use as a beginner but has the features to expanded usage by any level of shooter. The latest (X100V) has the same sensor as the X-T4 and produces great images. It is small and looks great, is small and easy to grab every time you go out the door, has a fixed lens that performs quite well, etc. A great place to start.