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Are you using Microsoft's Azure Site Recovery, planning to do so or are you looking at the various third party alternatives as cloud-based DRaaS becomes a more viable data protection alternative?
Microsoft has rolled out two new cloud-based solutions in recent days, including Disaster Recovery to Azure and Redis Cache services.
With Cove’s Standby Image recovery in Azure, it’s possible to deliver enhanced disaster recovery while experiencing up to 60% cost savings over traditional appliances.
Azure’s single most powerful feature is that it can help companies to reduce the cost of their DR, whilst maintaining maximum performance (think fast recovery times, near-zero data loss).
No backup data center? No problem. Microsoft Azure Site Recovery keeps applications and services running on the cloud if disaster strikes.
Keepit is debuting its latest data protection solution, the Azure DevOps backup and recovery service, engineered to centralize team culture around protection by safeguarding workloads against ...
Microsoft keeps added new features to it Azure Cloud service. The latest addition is "instant" data recovery and protection capabilities as part of an expanded set of new storage management features.
Companies can also use Azure Site Recovery to have on-premise servers take over running an application in the event the company’s primary data center fails.
Microsoft, in its never-ending quest to pull business away from rival VMware, debuts new cloud disaster recovery service that replicates VMware and physical machine workloads.
Microsoft plans to enhance its Azure cloud backup and recovery by integrating technology from InMage, a business continuity vendor it just acquired.