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Canadian Cancer Society Ontario cures WAN woes

Canadian Cancer Society Ontario cures WAN woes

By:  Shane Schick  On: 30 Sep 2011 For: Network World Canada Creator

The non-profit organization needed to consolidate its network, but performance issues were getting in the way. How a successful installation is paving the path towards videoconferencing

The Canadian Cancer Society’s Ontario chapter wanted something that would easily solve its application performance issues, but no one suspected it would be so easy the secretaries would handle the implementations.

A national, community-based organization that is the largest charitable funder of research in the country, Canadian Cancer Society Ontario (CCS Ontario) has a wide-area network that connects two national offices in Toronto and Ottawa as well as 600 community locations. Managing the servers at all those remote locations takes up a lot of resources, however, which is why, like many firms, CCS Ontario has been consolidating its IT infrastructure to become more a “private cloud” environment. That’s when the problems started.

“They were old servers – there was no redundancy in disk storage, and we had trouble getting backups done over the network overnight,” says Gerry Holmes, IT director at CCS Ontario. “We started to look at what it was going to cost us to replace all those servers with server-class machines and at the same time, we had been looking at a project to upgrade the data centre and do some consolidation in there.”



http://video.itworldcanada.com/?bcpid=7044989001&bctid=1070849718001

The trouble was, e-mail and Internet services would slow to a trickle through such a project. Holmes was referred to WAN optimization vendor Riverbed through a channel partner. After watching a Webinar and being persuaded Riverbed’s Steelhead appliance could meet his firm’s needs, Holmes authorized a pilot at its Brampton, Ontario office.  

“We sent it out to the office with instructions and asked people in the office to install it,” he said. “Really, it was only a power plug and two cables, but we provided them with detailed instructions. They backed up their local file server to our data centre, re-established local file server access in the data centre and turned on the Riverbed (product).”

Holmes’ team didn’t tell the rest of the Brampton staff what was going on, but initially everything was running fine.

“We had to shut down the Riverbed (Steelhead appliance) in the afternoon, I don’t remember why. Minutes after we shut it down, we got a call from the Brampton office. ‘What have you done to our e-mail?’ It was accelerated so fast as to be noticeable once the WAN optimization wasn’t running.”


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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.
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