disaster recovery
The need for improved business cost savings and efficiencies, customer responsiveness and improved service levels, and disaster recovery, are the top three factors driving server virtualization decisions.
Which vendor excels at getting critical applications back online after failures, and making sure the most important virtual machines are given priority in the restart process?
The promise of cost savings derived from cloud computing is attractive, but concrete ROI is not always quickly achieved. Except when it comes to disaster recovery.
When it comes to installing apps for the future, businesses have their own way to go
No data center manager is likely to ignore security, but AFCOM officials say they need to recognize that cyber terror poses a more serious threat than a typical hacker
Partnering with Microsoft, Citrix deploys Hyper-V virtualization to ease disaster recovery tasks
RAID is not 100% foolproof because multiple hard disks can fail. I recently touched base with Bill Margeson, CEO, President and Co-Founder of CBL Data Recovery Technologies, on the subject of RAID, reliability and how companies in Asia plan their disaster recovery practices.
The dangers of putting data into the cloud was highlighted by the pain of Sidekick users when they lost everything
Virtualization as well as server and storage consolidation have received much attention lately. These technologies promise to enable IT organisations to not only reduce cost but also increase resource utilisation and service level.
Natural disasters like the recent typhoons and earthquakes plaguing Asia are a wakeup call for organizations to take on disaster recovery and business continuity more seriously.






