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Investing in a robust disasterrecovery program upfront can save considerable costs down the road. According to FEMA, nearly a quarter of businesses never re-open following a major disaster—a sobering statistic. [i] Without a robust disasterrecovery plan in place, it can take days, weeks, or even months to recover.
They also know that without a reliable disasterrecovery (DR) solution to protect business-critical applications, all their modernization efforts could be rendered moot in a matter of seconds. An IDC survey across North America and Western Europe highlights the need for effective disasterrecovery.
Join other disasterrecovery and technology resilience leaders in sharing your strategy for addressing local and systemic risks affecting your business. Click on the link below to fill out the Forrester and DisasterRecoveryJournal’s biannual survey.
Each year, Forrester Research and the DisasterRecoveryJournal (DRJ) team up to launch a study examining the state of business resiliency. Each year, we focus on a resiliency domain: IT disasterrecovery (DR), business continuity (BC), or overall enterprise risk management (ERM).
Each year, Forrester Research and the DisasterRecoveryJournal team up to launch a study examining the state of business resiliency. We focus on a different, rotating resiliency domain each year: IT disasterrecovery, business continuity, or overall enterprise risk management. In this survey, […].
Each year, Forrester Research and the DisasterRecoveryJournal (DRJ) team up to launch a study examining the state of business resiliency. We alternate between two resilience domains each year: IT disasterrecovery and business continuity. This is the year of business continuity!
Each year, Forrester Research and the DisasterRecoveryJournal team up to launch a study examining the state of business resiliency. Each year, we focus on a particular resiliency domain: IT disasterrecovery, business continuity, or overall enterprise risk management. Disasterrecovery.
Swift recovery is paramount to minimizing damage. Why a disasterrecovery plan may not be good enough Many organizations have disasterrecovery plans and assume the concept of disasterrecovery and cyber recovery are the same: a system or location goes down, you shift operations, complete recovery efforts, and return to normal.
As Robert Blumofe, chief technology officer at Akamai Technologies, told The Wall Street Journal recently, “The goal is not to solve the business problem. Develop comprehensive disasterrecovery plans: Ensure you have well-tested plans to recover from potential IT disasters. The goal is to adopt AI.”
AI failures also hit the tech journalism world, with CNET being forced to retract more than 35 stories that were written with the help of a tool called the Responsible AI Machine Partner, or RAMP. Business Continuity, DisasterRecovery, Generative AI, IT Strategy This turned out not to be true.)
for billing, showback and/or chargeback) - DisasterRecovery / Redundant service sources where needed. Cloud Computing Journal. SLA) monitoring - Cost and budget tracking (i.e. Some would call the above integration functions "Glue Logic." Peter Cochrane. Reflections of the Void. Steve Wilson. Thomas Bittman. Virtual Enthusiasm.
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. Cloud Computing Journal. eliminate NICs and HBAs). reduce overall quantity of servers, (e.g.
Purkay Labs Featured in Boston Business Journal, Data Center Knowledge, and Others. DisasterRecovery. Sign up for the Data Center Knowledge Newsletter. Get daily email alerts direct to your inbox. Connect via Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn & RSS. Posted July 18th, 2013. [.] Read the full article at Data Center Knowledge. [.].
” Wall Street Journal - “Offerings like Cloud Foundry, and competitors such as Salesforce.com’s Heroku and OpenShift backed by software firm Red Hat, are jockeying to win over developers working on cloud apps and other technologies for corporations. DisasterRecovery. Silicon Valley. North Carolina.
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. Cloud Computing Journal. The 13 different functions are mapped onto the data center "stack" at right. Peter Cochrane. Reflections of the Void.
And fast repurposing means you can deliver instant High Availability (HA), entire environment disasterrecovery (DR), and near-instant scaling (capacity-on-demand). Cloud Computing Journal. In fact, even without VMs, some consolidation is possible by being able to use the same box for different uses at different times.
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. Cloud Computing Journal. These two SLA examples are quite different and will therefore consume different power.
More from Egenera was published today in the Wall Street Journals MarketWatch website. Not all High Availability (HA) and DisasterRecovery (DR) is solved by VM technology. Cloud Computing Journal. I called these the " big blind spots ". When I tell them about Egenera, their eyes widen, and they go "you can do that?"
What It Means For IT Professionals "; they cite a recent joint Forrester and DisasterRecoveryJournal survey regarding BC strategies. Cloud Computing Journal. Lots of content is now being written by industry analysts; In a recent Forrester Research Blog, Stephanie Balaouras writes " Swine Flu? Peter Cochrane.
DisasterRecovery – expanding on the example above, if an entire domain of servers fails, the entire group of server IO states, networking states, etc. Cloud Computing Journal. This provides a ‘universal’ style of failover that doesn’t require clustering software. IOV is agnostic to the workload!
And, if you can now logically re-define server and infrastructure profiles, you can also create simplified Disasterrecovery tools too. Cloud Computing Journal. This eliminates a large number of components needed for infrastructure provisioning, scaling, and even failover/clustering (more on this later). Peter Cochrane.
Along with enabling server consolidation, the software is delivering superior high availability (HA) and disasterrecovery (HA). Cloud Computing Journal. Panasonic chose Egenera products to consolidate servers and reduce floor-space. Peter Cochrane. Reflections of the Void. Steve Wilson. Thomas Bittman. Virtual Enthusiasm.
First, since we are an SEC-registered investment adviser with lots of confidential and sensitive information on our hands, issues regarding the security of our electronic files – both in terms of disasterrecovery as well the integrity of the company with whom we are entrusting to house our data – are paramount.
PAN Manager also enables SCBIT to make every application highly available at virtually no cost and provides a unique N+1 approach to disasterrecovery. Cloud Computing Journal. Their evalutation also showed performance advantages of running Oracle 10g on servers with PAN Manager, versus traditional systems. Peter Cochrane.
2) DisasterRecovery: we can re-constitute an environment of server profiles, including all of their networking, ports, addresses, etc., Cloud Computing Journal. even if that environment hosts VMs and native OSs. Peter Cochrane. Reflections of the Void. Steve Wilson. Thomas Bittman. Virtual Enthusiasm. Virtual Geek.
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. Cloud Computing Journal. Reflections of the Void. Steve Wilson. Thomas Bittman. Virtual Enthusiasm. Virtual Geek.
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). Cloud Computing Journal. can be re-created in a separate location on "cold" bare (unprovisioned) hardware. All this assumes mirrored SAN storage, of course.
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. Cloud Computing Journal. So the available market of real leap-frog CIOs is still small.
Each year, Forrester Research and the DisasterRecoveryJournal (DRJ) team up to launch a study examining the state of business resilience. We examine different topics in business resilience such as disasterrecovery, but this time it’s all just business resilience.
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