Our Disaster Recovery solutions and services can help protect your corporate information and ensure business continuity.
We currently offer a number of solutions to ensure the continual protection of your critical data, files and information.
Data loss can often occur in any number of ways including human error, a computer virus, hardware or system failure, software corruption, theft, or a natural disaster.
Small and medium-sized businesses with limited technical staff maybe are particularly vulnerable in the event of any type of major disaster.
It is therefore extremely important to have your disaster recovery plan documented and to periodically test the plan to ensure that it meets the ever changing needs of your business. The plan should detail your data assets and document how each asset will be backed-up and restored.
It should also include policies regarding media storage, media rotation, and security, as well as procedures for natural disasters.
Obviously, disaster recovery planning should be a regular activity for businesses of all sizes.
Unfortunately, many small and medium-sized businesses are not adequately prepared to handle a major data loss.
Some startling statistics:
For organizations that do not have a DRP in place a complete plan needs to be documented:
Customers that have an existing DRP in place need to test that plan on a regular basis to ensure the business can survive a disaster in its current state. An audit should include a specific checklist of tasks that will be independently performed and/or verified in conjunction with on-site staff. This checklist should, at a minimum, include the following:
This solution provides businesses with near real-time backups that also includes seamless off-site data storage along with multi-year archiving and fast server virtualization capabilities.
There are advanced restoration options like file and folder level restorations, with Exchange message and mailbox recovery and bare metal restorations to dissimilar hardware. Within hours, the unique Gateway device can also be configured to function as a virtual server if needed. This solution will replace management intensive, error-prone tape backups while providing much more..
Co-locate your business critical equipment in a secure, state-of-the-art data center that connects directly to a Tier 1, IP network. From extensive power back up systems to complete fire detection and suppression plans, the facility is constructed to ensure the safety and security of your equipment.
Virtualization is a method of running multiple independent virtual operating systems on a single physical computer. It is a way of maximizing physical resources to maximize the investment in hardware. Since Moore's law has accurately predicted the exponential growth of computing power and hardware requirements for the most part have not changed to accomplish the same computing tasks, it is now feasible to turn a very inexpensive 1U dual-socket dual-core commodity server into eight or even 16 virtual servers that run 16 virtual operating systems.
Virtualization technology is a way of achieving higher server density. However, it does not actually increase total computing power; it decreases it slightly because of overhead. But since a modern $3,000 2-socket 4-core server is more powerful than a $30,000 8-socket 8-core server was four years ago, we can exploit this newly found hardware power by increasing the number of logical operating systems it hosts. This slashes the majority of hardware acquisition and maintenance costs that can result in significant savings for any company or organization.