A1: Voice Over IP Enterprise Solutions with Asterisk
08/08/2007, 11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
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08/08/2007, 11:30 AM - 12:30 PM
Your IT gear requires more power while electricity costs are skyrocketing. Put the problem into perspective.
RE: 10 woeful tales of data gone missing: ACIS ResearchBy Anonymous on January 29, 2009, 5:02 pmResearch for ACIS 5524 research paper. Network World Article, Pack Rat Nation
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Citi group information breachBy Anonymous on July 7, 2009, 1:56 pmi got a notice from Citi Group about three months ago that my personal information had been compromised in some way and that they needed to issue me a new card. Seemed this was a large scale issue.
How could you forget IBM??By Anonymous on January 30, 2009, 12:06 pmI'm one of the former employees that was affected by this screw-up. So far, no problems....yet. http://www.dailycamera.com/news/2007/jun/08/ibm-loses-tapes-personal-information/
Outsourcing Backup FiascoBy Anonymous on January 30, 2009, 11:21 amIn July ’99, my employer had outsourced almost every aspect of the IT operation to different organizations. One group managed Lotus Notes, another loaded the backup tapes an night, yet another removed the tapes in the morning, and no one was responsible for the whole operation. Fast forward to February, ’00: We’d successfully crossed over into Y2K, and everything seemed fine. The NOTES server had a failure of one of its RAID-5 drives. To save a couple of dollars in shipping, the server-support team ordered standard delivery for the replacement unit. [RAID-5 spreads data evenly over all of the drives in the set, and has enough redundancy to survive the loss of any one drive. If two drives are lost, there is a total loss of data.] You guessed it, before the replacement drive arrived, a second drive failed. No problem, just rebuild the array and reload from the last backup. Riiiiiiiiight! The next morning, the clients all reported that ALL mail between August ’99 and the 2nd failure was missing! Not one of the tapes that had been faithfully loaded and unloaded every day for 7 months had one byte of “current data” because no one had checked the backup logs. No one saw that the backups were not running. Even with all of the Y2K paranoia, no one had validated even one of the backup tapes. Anyone could have, Someone should have, No one did. So, other than local copies on personal machines, all the corporate lawyers’, corporate accountants’, corporate financiers’’, and corporate HRs’ emails for 7 ½ months was lost forever.