Posted by Tom Fulton on August 28, 2009 at 04:59:59:
In Reply to: Re: A few specifics... posted by Keith Smith on August 27, 2009 at 21:35:07:
as a third or last line of defense in a backup strategy. First line is hardware redundancy - we don't quote any servers without RAID 5 disks. Second line is backup to tape or external disk drive. Third line of defense is disaster recovery - what does your account do if his building has a flood or a fire? How long will it take him to get new hardware in place, get data restored and be back at work? Three days, a week, two weeks? With this product, in the event of a real disaster, they can be back at work immediately via CometAnywhere to the Disaster Recovery site.
Of course the probability of a disaster on that scale is low, but nevertheless that's what the calculation should be - is the annual cost of the Disaster Recovery product worth the ability to be back at work immediately in the event of a disaster while they're putting their offices & servers back together. The product is not meant to be the only backup for the end-user. In terms of security questions you should go to the sonic.net site to review. In terms of C/A security, are you using IDMaint & CAID's for your CometAnywhere users?
Each file can be a maximum of 1MB in length Uploaded files will be purged from the server on a regular basis.