Business Continuity stories
Cloud solutions offer flexibility and cost savings for business continuity, but aren't a one-size-fits-all fix. CIOs still juggle risk and budget.
Cloud services are transforming disaster recovery. To build a robust back-up plan, consider network bandwidth and seeding backups, plus offsite storage.
Soft Solutions tells The Channel its always on the lookout for new vendor opportunities in the New Zealand marketplace.
Recovery from the cloud is a business necessity and recovery requests are dramatically increasing due to human error, Kroll Ontrack has said.
Ensuring data availability and rapid recovery from disasters is crucial for business continuity. Explore the top storage solutions transforming IT resilience.
Distributor Soft Solutions transitions to vendor, launching the Business Continuity Appliance to address SMEs' gaps in cost-effective hardware failure recovery.
What technical solutions will be required to enable a widespread teleworking deployment should the H1N1 virus threaten the health of employees?.
Businesses in New Zealand are increasingly considering disaster recovery (DR) policies and procedures due to IT infrastructure centralisation and rising costs.
Data center and cloud computing have implications for business continuity, says Plan-b. Security and redundancy are key.
Many businesses in Asia-Pacific unprepared for disasters, with only 36% implementing recovery solutions, risking valuable data and connectivity.
If the power stops, so does the business. Longer reserve power run times are necessary for converged data networks.
The fifth annual survey conducted by networked storage solution provider Brocade asked IT managers to identify their top needs for the coming year.
As security becomes commoditised, New Zealand CIOs focus less on it, yet its strategic importance in IT spending and MSS rises, says IDC analyst Jenna Griffin.
Relying solely on backup tapes for disaster recovery is a costly mistake, warns Peter Mangin, CIO of Saatchi and Saatchi New Zealand.
How severe can the impact of the Conficker worm be on a single city council that has (apparently) not implemented basic security solutions in place?.