disaster recovery
F5 Networks is expanding its presence in Asia, looking to tap opportunities in the area of web security, fast applications delivery and disaster recovery.
Thailand's post-flood rehabilitation program will lead to the recovery of the industrial sector and restore the confidence of investors and industrial operators over the next six months.
The floods in Thailand dampened the economic outlook for 2012, with end of 2011 forecast of 1.1 percent growth. However, a better outlook is seen for 2012, with growth forecast of between 4.5 to 5.5 percent to be driven largely by the government's post-flood reconstruction measures.
With the onset of the hurricane season in the US Midwest and Southeast, combined with earthquakes on the East Coast, Colorado and Peru, IBM has released six tips that individuals and businesses can use to help prepare their IT environments for natural disasters and a wide range of other threats.
Businesses are increasingly using cloud computing as a key component of their data protection plans, a new research done by CA Technologies showed.
These days public sector IT departments are faced with mounting pressure to do more for less. Existing infrastructure or new budgets just aren't enough to cover the costs of the latest and greatest computing solutions. In this environment, virtualization is seen as a transformational tool for the public-sector data center.
What stands between you and a disaster? For the people who have to plan, deploy and manage DR processes these can be summed up into three major categories: budget (money), skills and bandwidth.
Schleicher County Independent School District (SCISD) serves just under 3,000 people and 625 students. In this lightly populated area of the country, IT self-sufficiency isn’t just a virtue, but a necessity when you’re many miles away from the nearest small city and three hours away from a large computer retailer. This case study is about how lone IT support personnel, J.D. DOyle, uses Acronis as a DR solution.
Online data protection services in the cloud are less expensive than owning your own data protection infrastructure, provide an immediate off-site location for DR, and are inherently scalable. But how does one evaluate the relative strengths of a wide array of service offerings? What are the key criteria to look for in an online data protection solution that will provide safe, reliable, and secure backup and DR in the cloud?
For businesses and government organizations to fully realize and protect the inherent value of the data within their service, they have to recognize the need to eliminate deployment of multiple point solutions and embrace a unified approach to data management. If they do this they are in a position not only to reap the benefits in terms of business continuity and disaster recovery.












