Disaster Recovery-as-a-Service (DRaaS) is often the first step organisations take on the path to cloud adoption. It is a flexible, cost-effective way to deliver essential DR capability without all the CAPEX costs and pains of managing a physical DR site. With DRaaS, businesses quickly realise the benefits of cloud services, so it’s no surprise that many will consider a more permanent move to the cloud through Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS). By Scott Sparvero, CEO and Co-founder, iland.
Read MoreCompanies operating on old or inefficient systems is not new. Many were struggling years – if not decades – ago to run profitable concerns using outdated or inflexible technology, explains Philip White, Audacia.
Read MoreAccording to research group IDC, the number of connected devices is forecasted to grow to 42bn by 2025. With the demand for the Internet of Things (IoT), automation and 5G continuing to grow, and heavily influencing businesses and supply chains over the coming years, the sheer volume of data that companies will be dealing with will become more and more overwhelming. Whereas five to ten years ago we’d see new data centres popping up everywhere to store and move all of the data around, this is...
Read MoreBy Brian Remmington, CTO at Alfresco.
Read MoreRainer Kaese, Senior Manager, Toshiba Electronics Europe GmbH is looking at the year ahead. What device will win the storage race?
Read MoreWidespread use and support mean iSCSI will still be widely deployed for at least the next few years, but its growth prospects beyond that are very unclear. By John F. Kim, Chair, SNIA Networking Storage Forum.
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