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Working the Cloud

It never ceases to amaze me how this world has adopted the web.   Just today:

  • I changed my address online with the USPS.
  • I disconnected my electric service from my previous residence with the utility company.
  • I changed my mailing address with the bank.
  • I registered my new cell number with the National Do Not Call Registry.
  • I charged customers for their monthly fees using my online credit card merchant account.
  • I emailed the paid invoices to the customers, thanking them for payment.
  • I checked to see what movies were playing - try searching Google for the terms ‘city state movies’
  • I found a local health food store, supermarket and hub cap store.
  • I reconnected with an old friend through a social networking site.

Chaos

- a dynamical system that is extremely sensitive to its initial conditions

Key West is history - again.  My third attempt to reside in Bone City resulted in my most brief stay.  After passing out 200 business cards over a month’s time and not receiving a single phone call or even glimmer of hope for new business, change became an unavoidable condition.  I needed to find the next best place.

I loaded the car to its gunwales, then headed for the only way out - the Overseas Highway.  After 120 miles, one finally has the opportunity in Homestead to choose another direction - northeast to Miami or northwest to Naples.  After so many previous months of struggling to speak with my Latin neighbors, I chose the route toward my native tongue. 

I put my finger on the map of SW Florida.  Using Lehigh Acres as a center point, a 30-mile radius encompassed an area of nearly 1 million people:  Naples, Bonita Beach, Fort Myers, Cape Coral and Sanibel Island, all within Lee and Collier counties.  Lehigh Acres is also adjacent to the Fort Myers International Airport and its respective commercial business parks.

So here I am in the foreclosure capitol of the United States.

Backup & Disaster Recovery

We offer a great solution, especially for those businesses in the Keys so vulnerbale to a catastrophic event.  Please visit the following link to learn more:

http://scottabbotts.com/bdr/index.html

A State of the Art Data Backup and Disaster Recovery Solution that “bullet proofs” your data.

Highlights of the Service:

• A complete solution that is designed to reduce any server down time with the use of a specialized back up and virtual server appliance.
• Allows near real-time backups-as frequent as every 15 minutes.
• Offers offsite storage at an affordable cost
• Provides a low cost, speedy disaster recovery process.
• Data is encrypted so it is not accessible to anyone, either on the NAS or at the remote storage facility without the passkey.
• Eliminates the cost and time of managing on-site tape backup. We monitor and manage the entire process.
• All costs-frequent on site backups, on site virtual server, remote storage, disaster recovery in the event of disaster and 24×7 management of the entire process are bundled at a price that is comparable to the overall cost of buying and managing tape backup.

Executive Summary

A recent study discovered that, of companies experiencing a “major loss” of computer records, 43 percent never reopened, 51 percent closed within two years of the loss, and a mere 6 percent survived over the long-term  For small and medium-sized businesses (SMB’s) in particular, these statistics suggest the necessity of crafting a Business Continuity Planning (BCP) strategy grounded in a robust data backup and recovery solution.

Unlike enterprises, many smaller companies cannot afford optimal in-house strategies and solutions in service of BCP. These companies are consequently at an elevated risk of being put out of business due to any major loss of data. Loss of data could mean emails lost, accounting data lost, patient or client files lost, company records lost, client legal records or orders lost and so on. This white paper evaluates the scope of BCP for smaller companies, by examining their challenges, range of existing solutions and their drawbacks. We’ll also discuss how our solution overcomes commonly faced challenges to offer the most comprehensive solution out in the marketplace.

Business Continuity Planning for Small and Medium Size Businesses

BCP is the blueprint for how businesses plan to survive everything from local equipment failure to global disaster. Data-oriented BCP, an indispensable component of business planning regardless of organization size, poses the following challenges. Smaller businesses generally lack the in-house IT resources to achieve these demanding planning, technical and process requirements. Therefore, many SMBs either neglect to implement any data-oriented business continuity plan or else approach data backup and recovery in a sporadic, rudimentary fashion that fails to conform to the best practices of BCP.
 
Understanding the risks of not having a plan in place:
o Understanding Regulatory Compliance requirements in your industry. Regulations such as the Healthcare Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) and other laws- state and federal.
o  Understanding how to mitigate the risk of losing vital business data, such as customer records.
o Being aware of the environmental hazards that the business infrastructure is exposed to due to your geographical location.
o Estimating time it would take to build the business back if disaster strikes without having any BCP in place.
o Understanding ROI for having a BCP in place.

• Technical Challenges:
o Identify the lowest-cost, highest-performance data backup medium (tape or disk) based solution and keeping abreast with the latest and greatest in the industry.
o Ensure that all backed-up data is encrypted and otherwise safeguarded from theft.
o Ensure that backed-up data can be restored to different kinds of hardware.
o Ensure that data backup continues even during active recovery phases.

• Operational Challenges:
• Identifying what data to back up.
• Identifying how frequently to back up and related costs and ROI.
• Retain the ability to recover not only the most recent data, but also data from older time horizons, such as past quarters and years.
• Retain the ability to monitor and manage the integrity of ongoing data backup processes so that backup failures can be diagnosed and remedied before adversely impacting the BCP lifecycle.
• The need to hire Staff who can understand, design, implement and keep a BCP running 24/7 and be available to get business back in action after disaster strikes.

Traditional Solution vs. Emerging Technology

Implementing a data-oriented BCP strategy first requires designation of a specific data storage medium. Magnetic tape and disks are the two leading media for data backup storage. While magnetic tape is currently dominant, analyst Dave Russell of Gartner believes that “Recovery will move to online disk-based storage in the future. This will cause a major shift in the backup market during the next four to five years.”

Smaller Companies in particular will benefit from the shift, as recent advances in design and manufacturing lower the total cost of disk-based storage in terms of storage per bit. Falling prices, combined with the various performance advantages that storage industry analysts cite, render disk increasingly attractive. Gartner Group highlights the suitability of disk for these organizations by explaining that, “The need for high-performance online recovery of data, combined with the availability of low-cost disk arrays, has influenced enterprises and small and midsize businesses to adopt a disk-based approach for backup and recovery.”

Tape, in contrast to disk, is physically delicate and easily compromised by environmental factors such as heat, humidity, and magnetic interference. Moreover, tape cartridges must be replaced frequently (every 6-12 months). Tape’s innate sensitivity contributes to high failure rates, with analysts estimating that anywhere from 42 to 71 percent of tape restores fail. Even when magnetic tape backups are successful, tapes themselves are subject to loss or theft, and may be in the possession of an employee or vendor unable to reach a recovery site. Thus, even when physical backup and restoration processes succeed, tape may not prove to be as timely and appropriate a medium for data storage as disk. Time is a crucial consideration because each hour of server, application, and network downtime endured until data restoration comes at a high cost, especially to smaller businesses.

Analyst Jon Oltsik of Enterprise Strategy Group also points out that tape is seldom encrypted, compounding the destructive impact of tape theft: “Very few people encrypt backup tapes, which means that they rely on the security of the backup and off-site rotation process.” 

Disk offers not only lower cost encryption but also other advantages. In contrast to tape, “disks are more durable, last longer, withstand more overwriting and you don’t need to clean any heads,” according to Rinku Tyagi of PCQuest.  Additionally, “When it comes to backing up using disks, they are easier to manage. Disk backup systems include management tools, often browser-based, for you to easily configure settings and check status from anywhere.”

HP enumerates other advantages of disk storage, noting that “Data is backed up to disk much faster than tape, which translates to less impact on production server availability. Disk is also a more reliable media than tape and less prone to error, which translates to less failed recoveries.” 

While disk offers advantages over tape, it is not a panacea. After installing disk technology, Companies will still be responsible for monitoring and managing backup processes, encrypting and safeguarding backed up onsite and offsite data, restoring data to new hardware, and other functions. Without implementing a layer of governance over disk-based data backup, these Companies court the danger of failed backups and delayed restoration of data, thereby jeopardizing their chances of successful recovery from major data loss.

Smaller Companies unable or unwilling to invest in the human expertise and infrastructure support systems necessary for data-oriented BCP can leverage our data backup and recovery solution, which removes cost and complexity burdens from your staff.

A Complete Solution that addresses all of your BCP Needs

Near Real-Time Backups: Our “Incremental Forever” methodology captures all changes to the initial image in increments of 15 minutes. The Incremental Forever technology not only backs up recent datasets but also allows end users to reconstruct the state of their data as it stood at the end of various 15-minute restoration points. This level of forensic and auditable data recovery may satisfy various regulatory requirements (such as HIPAA and GLBA) for data retention and data record reconstruction, and also serves stakeholders such as supply chain planners, warehouse analysts, auditors, and legal counsel.

On-site Virtual Server: If any of your servers fail, our server virtualization technology embedded in the Network Attached Storage (NAS) allows customer servers and applications to be restored and rebooted in less than 30 minutes in most cases. As you may sometimes endure a wait of several days in order to receive replacement servers from vendors, your NAS can have your business up and running. The NAS multitasks so that, even while functioning as a virtual server, it can continue to back up data from other devices plugged into the NAS. Our technology thus allows you to remain in business without any significant loss of data backup, server functionality, or application downtime.

A Complete Image: We generate an image of all hard drive partitions via an agent, which is warehoused on the NAS device physically located at your location. The data is stored using AES-256 bit encryption and compressed. We employ a block-level, not file-level, backup, which means that data is captured at the level of 1’s and 0’s. Block level data is raw data which does not have a file structure imposed on it. Database applications such as Microsoft SQL Server and Microsoft Exchange Server transfer data in blocks. Block transfer is the most efficient way to write to disk and is much less prone to errors such as those that result from file-level backups. Additionally, block level backups are not affected by open files or open databases. The block-level image is an exact digital duplicate of the on-site server

Intuitive and Flexible Restoration: A good backup system should allow for quick and flexible restores. Our solution allows for recovery of files, folders, partitions, mailboxes/messages, databases/tables using a quick and intuitive process. In case of a complete server failure we do support a bare metal restore to new hardware which has a different configuration, hardware and drivers as compared to the failed server. Our 15-minute incremental based backup allows restores to be done from any point in time, allowing for multiple versions of files, folders, messages/mailboxes, database/tables to be restored.
Secure Remote Storage: After imaging the servers to which it is attached, the NAS device then creates an independent 256-bit encrypted tunnel and transmits the imaged data to a secure offsite location where it resides in an encrypted, compressed format. That remote site then replicates again to an alternate data center, creating a total of three copies of the data in three geographically distinct regions. Since the data is encrypted and only you have the key, no one has access at any of the remote storage facilities.

Transmitting data to a remote site is a key component of BCP. It guarantees that, in case of physical damage to the client’s network or NAS, or even regional disaster, the data is safe in uncompromised locations. Encryption is an important step in the process of transmitting data between the NAS and the remote sites, because it greatly reduces the risk of data loss incidents that plague magnetic tape and prevents man-in-the-middle attacks during transmission. We employ the 256-bit Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) algorithm because it has never been broken and is currently considered the gold standard of encryption techniques and render transmitted data immune to theft.

Secure, Bandwidth Throttling Transfer: Transmission itself occurs over your Internet connection, and can easily be configured to minimize bandwidth consumption. Our NAS leverages Adaptive Bandwidth Throttling, which only utilizes unused bandwidth or allows us to set an outbound limit. Our UDP based smart transfer technology utilizes a host of innovative algorithms to speed up data transport and resume from failure. We can therefore exercise fine control over the data imaging and transmission processes.

24×7 Completely Managed Solution:  Our 500-person Network Operations Center (NOC) monitors your NAS units and the attached servers 24/7. Failed processes generate immediate alerts to our engineers, who often remotely correct errors within minutes of receiving notification. In case of more serious NAS issues, we will conduct repairs at your site. If any NAS units are irreparably damaged or destroyed, at an additional cost we will overnight ship replacements—pre-loaded with all stored data—directly to your location.

Affordable Cost: We offer a pricing packaged that is all inclusive of the complete backup and disaster recovery service-with no hidden costs. All your costs are bundled and include the NAS, the Incremental Forever Methodology, file restorations, file integrity checks, secure data transmission and remote storage.

dba Scott Abbotts

Please see About section.

Renewed computer

A client of mine had two computers: a desktop, which she used primarily for web design and photo editing; and a notebook she used for the same purposes while travelling. 

The desktop died, so it was time to dust off the laptop.  But the laptop had little RAM memory and a small hard drive.  Adding a substantial amount of memory made a considerable improvement in performance.  Adding an external hard drive added the ability to access data salvaged from the desktop, as well as the ability to backup the current system using Acronis True Image Workstation

Click, click, click..  Bad cluster errors..  Files and programs are loading slowing.  Hoo boy, the small internal hard drive is going.  So we purchased a replacement hard drive with much greater capacity - from 40GB to 320GB.  After running a fresh backup of the system, we removed the old drive and installed the new 320GB drive in its place.  A boot disk had to be created from the Acronis program in advance.  So once the boot CD was inserted and the system restarted, the Acronis recovery program launched. 

The Acronis wizard allowed us to partition the new drive into 2 drive letters - C:\ and E:\.  We copied the backup file to the C:\ partition and voila - her system booted just exactly as it had on the previous older hard drive, complete with all her current programs, settings and data.  Once up and running, there was an enormous capacity to store data on the E:\ drive.  All of her years of Photoshop files and photos, all of her financials, all of her emails back to the year 2000, and all of her other Word and Excel documents only took up a small sliver of the graphic pie chart that represented the usage of that data partition.

And the new system now works faster than ever.

Day 3

Like a sunken ship finding new life at the bottom of the sea, I’m finding new challenges and renewed purpose here at the bottom of this peninsula. 

1.  Finding a new home:  Currently staying at the Blue Parrot Inn.  They moved from a smaller room into a larger one with a refrigerator - yay!  And going to look at a shared rooming situation with shared bath & kitchen for only $850 a month!  =(

2. Finding work:  Handed out about 15 biz cards yesterday.  Just posted an ad on Craigslist.  And going to speak with neighboring inn and others as i network around the island.

Back in Key West

I first moved to Key West in 1992 from my hometown of Branford, CT.  I remained here for 2 years working as a carpenter, then obtained my FL real estate license to work in the Fort Lauderdale area for the next 4 years.  I made another move to Key West in 1998 to sell timeshare, but a severe wrist injury sent me north to recuperate.  After 10 years on Cape Cod, I’ve returned to narrow lanes, white picket fences and floral scents - a little bit of New England washed up on a ‘Carribean’ island.  

This time I bring a new skill set - one that barely existed in 1992.  The Commonwealth of Massachusets was kind enough to re-train me due to the injury to my ‘hammer hand’.  I obtained the A+ Certification from CompTIA, then worked briefly for the US Census before starting my own computer service.  A few years later, I had developed the business to become one of the premier IT providers on Cape Cod and one of only 2 Microsoft Small Business Specialists.  We were the first on the Cape to offer Managed Services in an ongoing, proactive and preventive fashion.