Thursday, November 01, 2007

Recovering from disasters

Network World

Unified Communications




Network World's Unified Communications Newsletter, 11/01/07

Recovering from disasters

By Michael Osterman

The horrible fires in Southern California over the past week, Hurricane Katrina, the blackout in the northeast several years ago, the tornadoes that hit the Midwest every year, a faulty RAID controller and the occasional rat that chews through electrical cabling can knock out e-mail service for hours or days or even weeks at a time. While the situation is critical when e-mail service is unavailable, unified communications will make the issue much worse when both telephony and e-mail share a centralized infrastructure.

The consequences of an outage can be very damaging. A study we did recently found that one in five organizations estimates they could lose up to a half million dollars in the event of a major e-mail outage. Aside from the monetary impact, there is the damage to an organization’s reputation, the damage to its brand and the inability for its employees to be as productive as they otherwise could be.

In general, the faster the recovery time, the more expensive the solution. Systems that provide hot standby e-mail systems or mirroring usually provide rapid recovery, but are typically expensive. Electronic vaulting or journaling, on the other hand, while less expensive, provide recovery times that might not be acceptable. What organizations need, therefore, is a system that provides the best of both worlds.

Enterprise WLAN Gear: From A to Z.

From buying tips to peer discussions. From case studies to market trends. Network World's newly enhanced Enterprise WLAN Gear Buyer's Guide has everything you need to stay current, research technology, compare products and implement solutions - all in one convenient location.

Click here to go to the Enterprise WLAN Gear Buyer's Guide now.

In planning a disaster recovery solution, organizations need to answer several questions: How much e-mail data loss is acceptable following a disaster? How much time between the beginning of an e-mail service loss and e-mail recovery is acceptable? What quantifiable or other benefits would there be in speeding up the recovery process?

We will be hosting a Webinar this week on the topic of disaster recovery and will be discussing one company’s offerings focused on disaster recovery in Exchange environments. You can sign up for this no-charge Webinar here.

Editor's note: Starting Tuesday, Nov, 13, this newsletter will be renamed "Unified Communications Alert." Subscribers to the HTML version of this newsletter will notice some enhancements that will provide you with access to more resources relevant to unified communications. You will still receive Michael Osterman's analysis of this market, which you will be able to read in its entirety online at NetworkWorld.com, along with links to relevant news headlines of the day. We hope you enjoy the enhancements and we thank you for reading Network World newsletters.


  What do you think?
Post a comment on this newsletter

MOST-READ STORIES:
1. Networking's 50 greatest arguments
2. Microsoft plots ambitious SOA roadmap
3. Google's social networking power move
4. IT pros share their horror stories
5. Is Fibre Channel dead?
6. Podcast: Real-life scary security stories
7. Attack code for Kodak bug in Windows
8. Cisco certifications: All you need to know
9. Top 20 Firefox extensions
10. Cisco's profits: 5 trends worth watching

FEATURED BUYER'S GUDIE:
Network Access Control


Contact the author:

For webinars or research on messaging, or to join the Osterman Research market research survey panel, go here. Osterman Research helps organizations understand the markets for messaging and directory related offerings. To e-mail Michael, click here.



ARCHIVE

Archive of the Unified Communications Newsletter.


BONUS FEATURE

90% of IT Managers are leaving their company at risk for a DNS ATTACK. Get the tools and resources you need to keep your DNS healthy and secure. Run a DNSreport on your domain today - 56 critical tests run in 8 seconds.

Visit www.dnsreport.com to learn more. (apply coupon NWW2007NLA for a 25% membership discount)


PRINT SUBSCRIPTIONS AVAILABLE
You've got the technology snapshot of your choice delivered to your inbox each day. Extend your knowledge with a print subscription to the Network World newsweekly, Apply here today.

International subscribers, click here.


SUBSCRIPTION SERVICES

To subscribe or unsubscribe to any Network World newsletter, change your e-mail address or contact us, click here.

This message was sent to: networking.world@gmail.com. Please use this address when modifying your subscription.


Advertising information: Write to Associate Publisher Online Susan Cardoza

Network World, Inc., 118 Turnpike Road, Southborough, MA 01772

Copyright Network World, Inc., 2007

No comments:

Post a Comment