Posts Tagged ‘Business Data’
Virtual Data Vulnerable Due To Poor Backup
Last Updated on Wednesday, 1 December 2010 04:43 Written by databank Wednesday, 1 December 2010 04:43
Virtual Data Vulnerable Due To Poor Backup
Business data residing on virtual machines (VMs) is vulnerable due to the astonishing lack of regular backups. Many businesses are enjoying the benefits of virtualisation and storage arrays, but it seems that an astonishing number of businesses are not properly … Weiterlesen ?
Read more on ITespresso.de
Mapping Out a Storage System
An article on Processor explores the relationship between digital mapping company DeLorme and BakBone, a disk-based backup and deduplication solution that is hardware-agnostic, works on most file systems, provides integrated data protection, and offers up to a 12 to 1 deduplication ratio.
Read more on Enterprise Storage Forum
Intel hearing delayed, talks ongoing, says Nvidia CEO
IDG News Service – Nvidia and Intel together asked a Delaware court to postpone the start of a trial between the two chip makers until next year as they continue to seek a settlement, Nvidia’s CEO said Wednesday. The trial had been scheduled for Dec. 6.
Read more on Computerworld
Tags: Agnostic, Astonishing Number, Backup, Backup Business, Business Data, Ceo, Chip Makers, Computerworld, Data, Delaware Court, Delorme, Digital Mapping Company, Enterprise Storage, Idg News Service, Integrated Data, Nvidia, Poor, Storage Arrays, Storage Forum, Storage System, virtual, Virtual Data, Virtual Machines, Virtualisation, Vulnerable | Posted under Security | No Comments
Online Data Storage & Backup Eliminates Weather Worries
Last Updated on Saturday, 18 September 2010 08:21 Written by databank Saturday, 18 September 2010 08:21
Long ago, the successful sale of whatever widgets a company offered wasn’t much affected one way or another by weather. In today’s electronic business world, though, violent weather can wreak havoc with threats to the data that make possible the successful marketing of a service or product.
Florida is the undisputed Lightning Capitol of the U.S., with hundreds of thousands of strikes recorded each year; Texas ranks #2, but Pennsylvania leads the nation in total lightning damage. In fact, the only places on earth relatively safe from lightning are Arctic, Antarctic and the middle of the oceans.
When a lightning strike – or any other form of violent weather – abruptly severs power distribution, there usually is a surge of current that can, in a nanosecond, completely destroy a database and the hardware containing it. The surge might occur during the disturbance, during operation of the equipment, and/or when power is restored. Destructive power surges can occur on any line running into your office – including AC power lines, telephone lines, and coaxial cable lines. One way or another, that means your servers – and all data backed up on them – are at risk.
A simple “surge protector” strip affords only the most minimal protection. For one thing, their effectiveness depends upon human oversight and maintenance – and human beings mean human errors. (Accidentally clicked it off? Whoops!) For another, if the surge protector has been hit once, its efficacy is immediately cut dramatically, affording hardly any protection at all from any subsequent strikes – yet many companies simply hit the re-set switch and continue using the same “protection.”
The safe way to protect your invaluable business data – customer background, ordering and contact information, organizational files, etc. – is to have your data backed up by an online data storage and retrieval service. An online data backup system means that no matter what happens to your physical plant or the tapes, CDs and servers housed therein, your data is safe and you can retrieve it at any time.
Today, a company’s electronic business data is most likely to be its more important, most valuable asset. Protecting it with an online data backup and storage services ensures that come what may – hurricanes, floods, tornados, storms – that data is safe, secure, and the business will go on as usual.
Tags: "hdmi over ac", Ac Power Lines, Business Data, Cable Lines, Coaxial Cable, Data Storage, Destructive Power, Electronic Business, High Risk, Lightning Damage, Lightning Strike, Minimal Protection, Nanosecond, Online Storage, Power Distribution, Power Surges, States Records, Successful Marketing, Sudden Surge, Surge Protector, Telephone Lines, Violent Weather | Posted under Online Data Storage | No Comments
Online Data Storage Trumps Disaster Insurance
Last Updated on Tuesday, 17 August 2010 02:28 Written by databank Tuesday, 17 August 2010 02:28
All responsible businesses today protect themselves from financial disasters via insurance policies structured to recoup loss of revenue should the unexpected occur. But an insurance policy can’t restore lost customer and other business data, and that’s often the most expensive loss of all.
A couple of years ago, when a business acquaintance first told me about his company’s decision to switch from media-based data storage (tapes, CDs, zip drives) to utilizing the services of an online data backup company, the first thing that came to mind was a nightmare that had occurred in my business back in the mid- to late 80s. “Disaster” was definitely the word for it – and our protection against the fallout from it was practically non-existent.
Sometime after the end of business on a Friday, some pipes burst in the suite of offices right above ours. Throughout the weekend, untold gallons of water crashed through the ceiling unrestrained and uncontrolled, so that by Monday morning it looked as if a tidal wave had washed us. Unexpected, to say the least, on the 14th floor of a building in the middle of town.
As is the case with most executives it was my habit to be the early bird to the office, and the sight that greeted me when I unlocked the door is forever burned into my brain. Our carpet was soaked through with three to four inches of water. Our furniture was all but floating through our suites – and even the pieces that remained stationary were soaked through and ruined. All the phone lines were shorted out. And I didn’t dare flip any light switches….
Worst of all, though, was what I saw when I went to inspect our small, fledgling IT area. Absolutely everything in the room was thoroughly drenched and dripping water, from our server to the file cabinets housing tape backups to the PCs on the desks. We had, just several months prior, begun the arduous task of moving our client and other business data from hard copies onto an electronic storage system – and I can still hear the one word that echoed in my head as I surveyed the damage: Gone.
Our insurance policy covered the financial losses – but nothing could reimburse us for or replace the staggering amount of vital data lost to the flood. Because this was in the 80s and IT departments were just beginning to be considered in small businesses, the learning curve was steep and expensive when anything out of the ordinary happened. Online data storage services didn’t even exist in those days. Our entire repository of crucial data had been on those tapes and on that server – and we lost almost all of it.
The first lesson my company learned from our flood was that we needed physical, off-site storage for our organizational and customer data. That’s how we handled backup and storage for many years following that event – but while that was a great deal safer than storing our data on-site, there was nothing to guarantee our storage site wouldn’t ever experience such an unexpected disaster, as well.
I never once fully stopped worrying about it – until I learned about online data storage and backup services. Today, my company utilizes both an on-site tape backup and the services of a remote, online backup system. Our in-house tapes are mostly used for monthly backups (thus saving wear and tear on the tapes and maintenance on the hardware) and we use an online data and storage service for daily data backups. We’re fully covered, now – and our data is as safe as it possibly can be.
Tags: 14th Floor, Arduous Task, Business Acquaintance, Business Data, Data Storage, Disaster Insurance, Dripping Water, File Cabinets, Financial Disasters, Fledgling, Four Inches, Hard Copies, Insurance Policies, Insurance Policy, Light Switches, Responsible Businesses, Stratton, Tape Backups, Tidal Wave, Trumps | Posted under Online Data Storage | No Comments

