AppAssure vs. the Competition

Whether you’re looking at downtime in dollars or comparing Replay’s backup and recovery solution with the traditional approach, Replay pays for itself after just one usage.

Here’s how Replay stacks up against the competition:

Replay 4

  Windows Servers

$899.00
$1,162.66
$1,219.00
  Continuous Synthetic Full Image Backups
-
-
  Fast multi-TB server backups (6GB/Min)
-
-
  Bare Metal Restore
-
      P2P,P2V,V2V,V2P
-
      Restore to Dissimilar Hardware
$299.00
$1,279.51
$304.00
  NTFS Mountable Recovery Points
-
  Off Host Backups
$299.00
-
  Instant Volume Level Recoveries
-
-
  Data De-duplication
-
$250.00
  Server Replication
$299.00
-
-
  Nightly Synthetic Log Checking and Truncation
-
-
  High Availability
-
-

  Exchange

$2,099.00
$1,162.66
$2,438.00
  Continuous Recovery Assurance Testing
-
-
  Recovery to PST
-
-
  Full Index Searching of Data Stores
-
-
  Message Level Restore
  Log Truncation

  SQL

$1,499.00
$1,162.66
$1,828.00
  Automatic Daily Recovery Testing
-
-
  Table Level Recovery
-
-
  Daily Log Truncation

  Hyper-V

$1,499.00
$2,799.00
$1,219.00
  Host Level Images
-
  Guest Aware Snapshots
-
  File Level Recovery from within Guest
-
 

The information contained on this page has been obtained from sources which AppAssure believes to be reliable. AppAssure does not warrant the completeness or accuracy of such information. AppAssure shall have no liability for errors, omissions, or inadequacies of the information contained in this website or for any interpretations of that information. Any opinions expressed herein are subject to change without notice and should not be primary or sole basis for your purchase decisions.



Subscribe Now

In This Section


Follow AppAssure

Twitter Facebook RSS Feed LinkedIn YouTube de.lic.io.us Digg

Latest eBook Chapter

Chapter 1: Introduction: Why the Backup 1.0 Mentality is Killing You

Series: The Definitive Guide Series
Author: Don Jones
ISBN: pending

Synopsis:
The first backup—technically—was around 1951, when the first generation of digital computing appeared in the form of UNIVAC I. The “backups,” such as they were, were the punch cards used to feed instructions to the massive [...]