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Achieving Server Recovery in Minutes through Virtualization
Live, Complimentary WEBINAR
Thursday, August 26, 2010 at 12:00pm Eastern / 09:00am Pacific
Hosted by 
Today’s disk-based backup approaches go much further than simply shifting the backup medium off of tape. They enable files, individual emails, and database entries to be restored without restoring volumes, data stores, and databases. They enable fast server recovery to any 15 minute interval in the past. They enable lost servers to be restored in minutes, either onto the same server or even onto an alternate one. And they finally solve the age old problem of what to do when that mission critical server is down. The answer: Recover it in minutes to a virtual server, giving you the breathing room to fix its original hardware without massive downtime.
Register today for this complimentary, live webinar to gain valuable insight into Recovery perspectives.
Speakers:
Greg Shields, an independent author, speaker, and IT consultant, IT industry analyst and Windows IT Pro blogger
Najaf Husain, Chief Executive Officer, President of AppAssure Software, an industry-leading manufacturer of application backup and recovery software, for this live Webcast, where they’ll discuss the trends in backup and recovery solutions

On Demand Webinar Playback:
Virtual Backups: Many Perspectives, Painful Management, Duplication of Work … Or, NOT?
Recorded Live, April 1, 2010
In this groundbreaking webinar, Microsoft MVP and VMware vExpert Greg Shields exposes the pitfalls in today’s multiple virtual backup environments.
Speakers:
Greg Shields, Microsoft MVP and VMware vExpert
Joshua Hoffman, Lead Geek at AppAssure Software
Brendan Hourihan, Network Engineer at Flagler College
In This Section
Latest eBook Chapter
Chapter 12: Tales from the Trenches: My Life with Backup 2.0
In the second chapter of this book, I shared with you some of the horror stories of Backup 1.0. I did so primarily as a way of highlighting how poorly our traditional backup techniques really meet our business needs. In this chapter, I want to do the opposite: share with you some stories of Backup 2.0, both from my own experience and from stories you readers have shared over the year‐long production of this book. Names have been changed to protect the innocent, of course, but I think you’ll find these to be compelling examples of how Backup 2.0 has been applied. Where possible, I’ll share information about the infrastructure that goes with these stories so that you can see some of the creative and innovative ways Backup 2.0 is being used in organizations like your own.



