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Below you'll find a list of all posts that have been tagged as "DRaaS"
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8 Things to Consider Before Choosing Your DRaaS Provider

In today’s era, business information is much more valuable and sensitive than ever before. According to a recent survey held by the University of Texas, you’ll be surprised to know that nearly 94% of companies undergoing a severe data loss do not survive, 43% never reopen, and almost 51% close within 2 years of the loss. Also, per Gartner, 7 out of 10 SMBs go out of business within a year of experiencing a major data loss. These statistics clearly show that with a growing dependency on information technology, the prospect of downtime, mass loss of data, and losing revenue is a very real concern, not to mention the long-term damage these occurrences bring to your company’s image and potential profit. The surge of disaster recovery as a service (DRaaS) presents a range of opportunities to safeguard our infrastructure and resources. DRaaS uses the infrastructure and computing resources of cloud services and presents a practical option to an on-site technology DR program. Administrators and IT leaders can make use of it to supplement their existing DR exercises by adding more comprehensive performance abilities. They can also employ the technology to replace their current DR activities entirely. Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) offers faster and more flexible recovery options for physical and virtual systems across different locations, with shorter and quicker recovery times. Yet, like any other advanced technology, DRaaS also bring various risks to the table. A vital tool for overcoming such DRaaS risks is known as a service-level agreement (SLA). It includes what the DRaaS vendor will provide based on performance metrics, such as uptime percent, percent availability of resources, and blocked security breaches. It also spells out solutions, such as financial penalties or refunds of maintenance costs for vendor failure to satisfy SLA conditions. Below, we discuss a few top risks involved with DRaaS and ways to mitigate them. Risk Issues of DRaaS and Ways to Mitigate Them 1. Access control In case of an emergency, securing access to critical data and systems is imperative to prevent any unauthorized access and possible damage. If a vendor has a Service Organization Control 2 (SOC 2) report available, make sure you ask for a copy of the same. But why? Because it provides you the audit data that addresses security, availability, confidentiality, processing integrity, and privacy metrics. 2. Security Considering that your critical company data might soon reside or already residing in a cloud environment, the security of that data is of greater concern than when the data was stored on site. Hence, ensure that your DRaaS provider has an extensive set of security resources to ensure that your critical business data is safeguarded and is always accessible. One such approach that you can follow is to work with a vendor that has multiple data centers with redundant storage facilities so that your critical business data can be kept and stored in more than one location. 3. Recovery and restoration These are the two key metrics in a DRaaS program that indicate how quickly a company’s data and systems can be restored to service after a disruptive incident. If your DRaaS provider’s track record during disasters compels you to take a pause for concern, adjust the parameters accordingly in the SLA or consider returning critical systems and data on-site to an alternate DRaaS vendor. 4. Scalability and elasticity The most important reason for the growing demand for managed services is their ability to adapt to changing business requirements quickly. While negotiating contracts and SLAs, you must make sure to evaluate the additional resources that can be made available during an emergency and how soon they can be activated. A vendor must fully disclose where the data and systems are kept and how resources are federated among other vendors. This is necessary to make sure that the data is accessible whenever required. 5. Availability It would be best to make sure that your resources are accessible when and where you need them. It is essential to keep in mind that every minute that technology and/or data aren’t restored in case of a disaster, your business runs the risk of a severe disruption to operations. Data in a SOC 2 report can shed some light on potential availability issues. 6. Data protection Never forget that lack of adequate data integrity controls can really endanger customer systems and data. So make sure that your vendor provides suitable data protection controls. 7. Updating of protected systems System and data backups must be made according to a client’s requirements. For example, full backups and added backups and security access to those backups must be safeguarded. Again, your SOC 2 reports can provide valuable information on these activities. 8.Verification of different data, data backups, and disaster recovery Your vendor’s capability to quickly verify data backup and system recovery is necessary for your IT management. So that, in any case of disaster, those key activities can be fully confirmed. Final Thoughts To summarize, true disaster recovery is a process of a continuous feedback loop, where testing and new information are included in the program to enhance your recovery options. But, without constant testing and feedback, your disaster recovery plan is ineffective. The point of all this is not to confuse you in any way, but instead, to help you open your eyes to the realities of DraaS risks you might experience in the near future. With all this knowledge, you must appropriately create a recovery plan that is extensive and well thought of, rather than full of missteps. Consider all this information when you start looking for a DRaaS provider to prepare the best plan possible.

Aziro Marketing

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Aziro (formerly MSys Technologies) 2019 Tech Predictions: Smart Storage, Cloud’s Bull Run, Ubiquitous DevOps, and Glass-Box AI

2019 brings us to the second-last leg of this decade. From the last few years, IT professionals have been propagating rhetoric. They state that the technology landscape is seeing a revolutionary change. But, most of the “REVOLUTIONARY” changes, has, over the time lost their gullibility. Thanks to the awe-inspiring technologies like AI, Robotics, and upcoming 5G networks most tech pundits consider this decade to be a game changer in the technology sector.As we make headway into 2019, the internet is bombarded with numerous tech prophecies. Aziro (formerly MSys Technologies) presents to you the 2019 tech predictions based on our Storage, Cloud, DevOps and digital transformation expertise.1. Software Defined Storage (SDS)Definitely, 2019 looks promising for Software Defined Storage. It’ll be driven by changes in Autonomous Storage, Object Storage, Self-Managed DRaaS and NVMes. But, SDS will also be required to push the envelope to acclimatize and evolve. Let’s understand why so.1.1 Autonomous Storage to Garner MomentumBacked by users’ demand, we’ll witness the growth of self-healing storage in 2019. Here, Artificial Intelligence powered by intelligent algorithms will play a pivotal role. Consequently, companies will strive to ensure uninterrupted application performance, round the clock.1.2 Self-Managed Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) will be ProminentSelf-Managed DRaaS reduces human interference and proactively recovers business-critical data. It then duplicates the data in the Cloud. This brings relief during an unforeseen event. Ultimately, it cuts costs. In 2019, this’ll strike chords with enterprises, globally, and we’ll witness DRaaS gaining prominence.1.3 The Pendulum will Swing Back to Object Storage as a Service (STaaS)Object Storage makes a perfect case for cost-effective storage. Its flat structure creates a scale-out architecture and induces Cloud compatibility. It also assigns unique Metadata and ID for each object within storage. This accelerates the data retrieval and recovery process. Thus, in 2019, we expect companies to embrace Object Storage to support their Big data needs.1.4 NMVes Adoption to Register TractionIn 2019, Software Defined Storage will accelerate the adoption rate of NVMes. It rubs off glitches associated with traditional storage to ensure smooth data migration while adopting NVMes. With SDS, enterprises need not worry about the ‘Rip and Replace’ hardware procedure. We’ll see vendors design storage platforms that append to NVMes protocol. For 2019, NMVes growth will mostly be led by FC-NVME and NVMe-oF.2. Hyperconverged Infrastructure (HCI)In 2019, HCI will remain the trump card to create a multi-layer infrastructure with centralized management. We’ll see more companies utilize HCI to deploy applications quickly. This’ll circle around a policy-based and data-centric architecture.3. Hybridconverged Infrastructure will Mark its FootprintHybridconverged Infrastructure (HCI.2) comes with all the features of its big brother – Hyperconverged Infrastructure (HCI.1). But, one extended functionality makes the latter smarter. Unlike HCI.1, it allows connecting with an external host. This’ll help HCI.2 mark its footprint in 2019.4. VirtualizationIn 2019, Virtualization’s growth will be centered around Software Defined Data Centers and Containers.4.1 ContainersContainer technology is ace in the hole to deliver promises of multi-cloud – cost efficacy, operational simplicity, and team productivity. Per IDC, 76 percent of users’ leverage containers for mission-critical applications.4.1.1 Persistent Storage will be a Key ConcernIn 2019, Containers’ users will envision a cloud-ready persistent storage platform with flash arrays. They’ll expect their storage service providers to implement synchronous mirroring, CDP – continuous data protection and auto-tiering.4.1.2 Kubernetes Explosion is ImminentThe upcoming Kubernetes version is rumored to include a pre-defined configuration template. If true, it’ll enable an easier Kubernetes deployment and use. This year, we are also expecting a higher number of Kubernetes and containers synchronization. This’ll make Kubernetes’ security a burgeoning concern. So, in 2019, we should expect stringent security protocols around Kubernetes deployment. It can be multi-step authentication or encryption at the cluster level.4.1.3 Istio to Ease Kubernetes Deployment HeadacheIstio is an open source service mesh. It addresses the Microservices’ application deployment challenges like failure recovery, load balancing, rate limiting, A/B testing, and canary testing. In 2019, companies might combine Istio and Kubernetes. This can facilitate a smooth Container orchestration, resulting in an effortless application and data migration.4.2 Software Defined Data CentersMore companies will embark on their journey to Multi-Cloud and Hybrid-Cloud. They’ll expect a seamless migration of existing applications to a heterogeneous Cloud environment. As a result, SDDC will undergo a strategic bent to accommodate the new Cloud requirements.In 2019, companies will start cobbling DevOps and SDDC. The pursuit of DevOps in SDDC will be to instigate a revamp of COBIT and ITIL practice. Frankly, without wielding DevOps, cloud-based SDDC will remain in a vacuum.5. DevOpsIn 2019, companies will implement a programmatic DevOps approach to accelerate the development and deployment of software products. Per this survey, DevOps enabled 46x code deployment. It also skyrocketed the deploy lead time by 2556x. This year, AI/ML, Automation, and FaaS will orchestrate changes to DevOps.5.1 DevOps Practice Will Experience a Spur with AI/MLIn 2019, AI/ML centric applications will experience an upsurge. Data science teams will leverage DevOps to unify complex operations across the application lifecycle. They’ll also look to automate the workflow pipeline – to rebuild, retest and redeploy, concurrently.5.2 DevOps will Add Value to Functions as a Service (FaaS)Functions as a Service aims to achieve serverless architecture. It leads to a hassle-free application development without perturbing companies to handle the monolithic REST server. It is like a panacea moment for developers.Hitherto, FaaS hasn’t achieved a full-fledged status. Although FaaS is inherently scalable, selecting wrong user cases will increase the bills. Thus, in 2019, we’ll see companies leveraging DevOps to fathom productive user cases and bring down costs drastically.5.3 Automation will be the Mainstream in DevOpsManual DevOps is time-consuming, less efficient, and error-prone. As a result, in 2019, CI/CD automation will become central in the DevOps practice. Consequently, Infrastructure as a Code to be in the driving seat.6. Cloud’s Bull Run to ContinueIn 2019, organizations will reimagine the use of Cloud. There will be a new class of ‘born-in-cloud’ start-ups, that will extract more value by intelligent Cloud operations. This will be centered around Multi-Cloud, Cloud Interoperability, and High Performance Computing. More companies will look to establish a Cloud Center of Excellence (CoE). Per RightScale survey, 57 percent of enterprises already have a Cloud Center of Excellence.6.1 Companies will Drift from “One-Cloud Approach.”In 2018, companies realized that having a ‘One-Cloud Approach’ encumbers their competitiveness. In 2019, Cloud leadership teams will bask upon the Hybrid-Cloud Architecture. Hybrid-Cloud will be the new normal within Cloud Computing in 2019.6.2 Cloud Interoperability will be a Major ConcernIn 2019, companies will start addressing the issues of interoperability by standardizing Cloud architecture. The use of the Application Programming Interface (APIs) will also accelerate. APIs will be the key to instill the capability of language neutrality, which augments system portability.6.3 High Performance Computing (HPC) will Get its Place on CloudIndustries such as Finance, Deep Learning, Semiconductors or Genomics are facing the brunt of competition. They’ll envision to deliver high-end compute-intensive applications with high performance. To entice such industries, Cloud providers will start imparting HPC capabilities in their platform. We’ll also witness large scale automation in Cloud.7. Artificial IntelligenceFor 2019 AI/ML will come out of the research and development model to be widely implemented in organizations. Customer engagements, infrastructure optimization, and Glass-Box AI, will be in the forefront.7.1 AI to Revive Customer EngagementsBusinesses (startups or enterprise) will leverage AI/ML to enable a rich end-user experience. Per Adobe, enterprises using AI will more than double in 2019. Tech and non-tech companies, alike, will strive to offer personalized services leveraging Natural Language Processing. The focus will remain to create a cognitive customer persona to generate tangible business impacts.7.2 AI for Infrastructure OptimizationIn 2019, there will a spur in the development of AI embedded monitoring tools. This’ll help companies to create a nimble infrastructure to respond to the changing workload. With such AI-driven machines, they’ll aim to cut down the infrastructure latency, infuse robustness in applications, enhance performances, and amplify outputs.7.3 Glass-Box AI will be crucial in Retail, Finance, and HealthcareThis is where Explainable AI will play its role. Glass-Box AI will create key customers’ insights with underlying methods, errors or biases. In this way, retailers don’t necessarily follow every suggestion. They can sort out responses that fit rights in that present scenario. The bottom-line will be to avoid customer altercations and bring out fairness in the process.

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