Disaster Recovery
Keeping Exchange up and running 24x7
- Our dependence on email to do day-to-day business tasks is fairly new. This dependence all began in the early 1970 with the advent of ARPANET (the US defences departments result of research into robust computer networks - which eventually led to the Internet as we know it today) and the phenomenal growth of personal computers.
- Sunday, February 01 - 2004 at 10:41
Delivering the full value of storage virtualisation
- At a time when budgets are shrinking and businesses are scrutinising their spending, it is especially important to get the most out of every storage resource. The average organisation will buy 100 percent more storage this year than last.
- Sunday, January 18 - 2004 at 19:41
Basics of an efficient storage structure for Microsoft Exchange
- Information technology is characterised not only by technological advances but also by changed cultural aspects such as user behaviour and requirements. This is especially apparent when it comes to messaging systems.
- Sunday, January 04 - 2004 at 20:15
Managing the Data Explosion
- Do you ever feel overwhelmed by the explosive growth in the amount of data? Every day, more information keeps coming to, running through, and going out from your business.
- Thursday, December 11 - 2003 at 21:32
Application Workload Management
- Looking at the history of IT over the past 10 to 15 years it would appear that in the beginning mainframes were king. All business applications could run on a single footprint and all management of the system was from a central point.
- Wednesday, November 05 - 2003 at 19:23
Spend, spend, spend - but integrate, integrate, integrate
- Sales of personal computers are a pretty reliable gauge of the state of the economy and researcher In-Stat/MDR's recent report that PC market growth will hit a paltry one per cent in 2002 says it all.
- Monday, October 13 - 2003 at 09:12
A day in the life of a CIO - A driver for business change
- It seems like only yesterday that the IT community was arguing the case for the board-level IT director. Since then, the CIO has come a long way and he probably now feels that he is carrying the weight of the company on his shoulders.
- Thursday, October 02 - 2003 at 20:27
Backup the basis on which disaster recovery is built
- Without sturdy data protection systems for the backup and recovery of data, other aspects of disaster recovery planning make little sense. The only reason we backup is to recover data and it is the data that gives systems a purpose and is what drives the business.
- Monday, September 22 - 2003 at 21:36




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