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The case for off-site data storage

The case for off-site data storage

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 20 Aug 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Read why a Toronto-based wealth management firm thinks its newly implemented online backup system is a necessity in the operation its business

“You can’t depend on staff to send the data over every night,” he said. “You need a system that can do it automatically and that’s what Storagepipe does for us every night. It takes the changes in our database over to their system, backs it up and leaves us with nothing to worry about.”

Storagepipe said its service can work with data on Windows and Mac-based laptops and desktops. The ability to remotely backup mobile PCs, Rodin said, might be one of the most attractive features for his clients.

“Laptops are moving around a lot and are not always connected,” he said. “One of the biggest benefits for the road warriors out there in the field making sales calls is that the minute they check into the hotel and get online, they’re data is going to be backed up.”

As for how much Storagepipe’s hosted system will cost, Rodin couldn’t get too specific, but said users can expect to pay about $25 a month on single machine for basic backup capabilities.

“So, even the smallest customers can get started at a very low level and grow from there,” Rodin said. “Companies that are much larger, with a more complicated environment, will allow find that our pricing is affordable and competitive with other internal backup procedures.”










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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.
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