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James Gaskin helps small offices get the most out of technology
Forgive me, but I haven't nagged you about backups in months. Remember how you promised yourself this year would be different? You included "regular data backups" in your New Year's Resolutions. You asked others to help you back up. You tore a backup software comparison out of a magazine. But, alas, your files languish in their typical, precarious, unbacked-up state.
So now is a good time to hear from a new backup vendor, Vembu Technologies. The company offers some interesting new features and covers more operating systems than many better known vendors. Check its site for trial versions.
Three flavors of Vembu's backup product, StoreGrid Version 2.0., are available: Free (for peer-to-peer backups between three computers), Professional (client-server) and Service Provider.
Service Provider offers remote backups from your business to an ISP, value-added reseller, or any other organization willing to host your data. If you have a second location or access to a remote server to hold backup files, the Professional version offers remote backups as well.
For those of you with two or three Windows computers on the same network, your price calculations are easy: zero. Vembu restricts the software to only three computers on one network and only supports Windows computers, but the price fits every budget.
While StoreGrid Free only supports Windows computers, StoreGrid Professional and Service Provider editions handle Windows, multiple Linux versions, Mac OS X, and FreeBSD clients and servers. Even better, you can back up any client type to any server type, although there's no data conversion so you can't restore Windows files to a Macintosh and make them magically readable.
Another nice twist is the Vembu user interface: a browser. Any new browser can be used, although the company demands you turn off generic popup blockers in Firefox 1.5.
Nathan Zych of Outsource IT Computing (OITC), started working with Vembu back in November 2005. Since his outfit does most of its client support remotely, StoreGrid's Web interface attracted Zych.
"We started migrating clients to the Service Provider option when it became available in February," says Zych. "Right now we have about 30 offices using it for remote backup."
OITC focuses on the medical and legal vertical market, meaning its systems are critical. "We had one office that was burglarized, and having an online backup of their systems allowed them to be up and running within 48 hours," says Zych. "Their server was stolen with 20,000 patient records and having full backup allowed us to deliver new equipment already loaded with their data."
James Gaskin writes books (16 so far), articles and jokes about technology and real life from his home office in the Dallas area.
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