This site uses cookies to improve your experience. To help us insure we adhere to various privacy regulations, please select your country/region of residence. If you do not select a country, we will assume you are from the United States. Select your Cookie Settings or view our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Cookie Settings
Cookies and similar technologies are used on this website for proper function of the website, for tracking performance analytics and for marketing purposes. We and some of our third-party providers may use cookie data for various purposes. Please review the cookie settings below and choose your preference.
Used for the proper function of the website
Used for monitoring website traffic and interactions
Cookie Settings
Cookies and similar technologies are used on this website for proper function of the website, for tracking performance analytics and for marketing purposes. We and some of our third-party providers may use cookie data for various purposes. Please review the cookie settings below and choose your preference.
Strictly Necessary: Used for the proper function of the website
Performance/Analytics: Used for monitoring website traffic and interactions
Monday, September 14, 2009. They span management of both physical and virtual software, servers, I/O, networking, etc. -- as well as higher-level functions such as High-Availability and DisasterRecovery. ▼ 2009. (50). skip to main | skip to sidebar. Fountainhead. An Ideal Datacenter-in-a-Box, Part II.
ability to use free pools of servers to re-purpose for scaling, failure, disasterrecovery, etc.). simplified higher-level services, such as providing fail-over, scaling-out, replication, disasterrecovery, etc. ► 2009. (50). eliminate NICs and HBAs). reduce overall quantity of servers, (e.g. ► June.
Monday, April 20, 2009. And fast repurposing means you can deliver instant High Availability (HA), entire environment disasterrecovery (DR), and near-instant scaling (capacity-on-demand). ▼ 2009. (50). skip to main | skip to sidebar. Fountainhead. Whos using Infrastructure Orchestration in Finance? ► June. (2).
Tuesday, September 22, 2009. Another enterprise with the same email application may be operating in a Tier-III datacenter environment with a rigorously-controlled response rate, a full disaster-recovery requirement, and 2GB of storage per mailbox. ▼ 2009. (50). skip to main | skip to sidebar. Fountainhead.
of administrative tasks such as OS and database software patching, storage management, and implementing reliable backup and disasterrecovery solutions.
This blog is related to my 2009 installment on Fabric as an IT Enabler. DisasterRecovery – expanding on the example above, if an entire domain of servers fails, the entire group of server IO states, networking states, etc. ► 2009. (50). What is IOV? Todays Physical Infrastructure. ► August. (1).
Tuesday, December 8, 2009. 2) DisasterRecovery: we can re-constitute an environment of server profiles, including all of their networking, ports, addresses, etc., December 9, 2009 at 8:21 AM. ▼ 2009. (50). skip to main | skip to sidebar. Fountainhead. Emergence of Fabric as an IT Management Enabler.
Tuesday, March 3, 2009. Not all High Availability (HA) and DisasterRecovery (DR) is solved by VM technology. ▼ 2009. (50). skip to main | skip to sidebar. Fountainhead. Insights into Data Center Infrastructure, Virtualization, and Cloud Computing. ITs Blind Spots in the data center. ► December. (2).
continuity and disasterrecovery. ► 2009. The Gartner Data Center Conference is the most comprehensive. compilation of sessions and advice on the future of the data center ever held. It offers the latest insights and best practices for all major. Additional information is available at www.gartner.com/us/datacenter.
Tuesday, June 2, 2009. I would expect the first-movers to adopt this wont be traditional enterprises -- but rather Service Providers, Hosting Providers and perhaps even IT DisasterRecovery operations looking to get into the IaaS and/or Cloud Computing space. June 3, 2009 at 4:44 PM. June 4, 2009 at 8:16 AM.
Wednesday, April 29, 2009. What It Means For IT Professionals "; they cite a recent joint Forrester and DisasterRecovery Journal survey regarding BC strategies. ▼ 2009. (50). skip to main | skip to sidebar. Fountainhead. Insights into Data Center Infrastructure, Virtualization, and Cloud Computing. ► June. (2).
Tuesday, May 5, 2009. Along with enabling server consolidation, the software is delivering superior high availability (HA) and disasterrecovery (HA). ▼ 2009. (50). skip to main | skip to sidebar. Fountainhead. Insights into Data Center Infrastructure, Virtualization, and Cloud Computing. ► December. (2).
Tuesday, September 29, 2009. ▼ 2009. (50). skip to main | skip to sidebar. Fountainhead. Insights into Data Center Infrastructure, Virtualization, and Cloud Computing. A real-world cloud user shares his findings. I subscribe to a number of mailing lists from my alma mater. ► December. (2). ► August. (1).
Monday, April 27, 2009. PAN Manager also enables SCBIT to make every application highly available at virtually no cost and provides a unique N+1 approach to disasterrecovery. ▼ 2009. (50). skip to main | skip to sidebar. Fountainhead. Insights into Data Center Infrastructure, Virtualization, and Cloud Computing.
Monday, February 23, 2009. Correcting computings wrongs - road to recovery? Should they all fail, such as in a disaster, the entire configuration, down to each servers I/O, networks, VLANs, etc., Presto - instant DisasterRecovery (DR). February 25, 2009 at 1:55 AM. ▼ 2009. (50). Fountainhead.
And, if you can now logically re-define server and infrastructure profiles, you can also create simplified Disasterrecovery tools too. ► 2009. (50). This eliminates a large number of components needed for infrastructure provisioning, scaling, and even failover/clustering (more on this later). ► May. (1).
In DisasterRecovery Planning, Don’t Neglect Home Site Restoration. In DisasterRecovery Planning, Don’t Neglect Home Site Restoration. Michelle Ziperstein is the Marketing Communications Specialist at Cervalis LLC , which provides data backup and disasterrecovery solutions for mission-critical data.
Thus it is particularly well-suited to provide both high-availability (HA) as well as DisasterRecovery (DR) in mixed physical/virtual environments – eliminating the need for complex clustering solutions. ► 2009. (50). ► December. (2). ► August. (1). ► June. (2). ▼ May. (1). ► March. (1).
The Software Defined Data Center Meets DisasterRecovery. The Software Defined Data Center Meets DisasterRecovery. Because many IT organizations are comfortable with the concept – and implementation – of SDDC, the logical next step is the adaption of software-defined disasterrecovery (SDDR.)
In this blog I’ll highlight some of the 2009 “down” trends in local government, and in the next blog entry, later this week, I’ll write about the “up” trends. These include budgets, staffing of IT units, disasterrecovery, “big” projects, travel and training.
One cloud computing solution is to deploy the platform as a means for disasterrecovery, business continuity, and extending the data center. Leveraging Cloud and Virtualization for DisasterRecovery. December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). Convergence.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
In DisasterRecovery Planning, Don’t Neglect Home Site Restoration - Following your initial Emergency Response Plan items, you should prioritize your Home Site Restoration, writes Michelle Ziperstein of Cervalis. December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143).
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
2Q 2009: $139 million. 3Q 2009: $186 million. December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113).
And, each will provide disasterrecovery office space, redundant private telco rooms and 10,000 square feet of raised floor in a Private Data Hall. December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137).
“Until today, cloud migration and cloud-enabled disasterrecovery have not been viable for the vast majority of enterprise data center apps,” said Chawla. December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131).
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110). April 2009 (145). March 2009 (105). February 2009 (113). January 2009 (114). DisasterRecovery.
Internap will host TalentWise from its Dallas data center with its Santa Clara data center used as a disasterrecovery site. December 2009 (95). November 2009 (125). October 2009 (131). September 2009 (143). August 2009 (119). July 2009 (131). June 2009 (137). May 2009 (110).
We organize all of the trending information in your field so you don't have to. Join 83,000+ users and stay up to date on the latest articles your peers are reading.
You know about us, now we want to get to know you!
Let's personalize your content
Let's get even more personalized
We recognize your account from another site in our network, please click 'Send Email' below to continue with verifying your account and setting a password.
Let's personalize your content