What is a Disaster Recovery ?
Disaster recovery focuses on the IT systems that help support critical business functions. Disaster recovery is a part of business continuity, which focuses more on keeping all aspects of a business running despite the disaster. Because IT systems these days are so critical to the success of the business, disaster recovery is a main pillar in the business continuity process.
Enterprise data is anything but uniform. Which is why your data protection, backup and recovery solution needs to cover the full range of data sources, file types, storage media and backup modes — from snapshots to streaming.
For systems with minimal downtime tolerance, such as customer-facing or mission-critical applications, a high availability plan can ensure they’re always up and running. For less critical workloads, a more cost-effective backup-based disaster recovery solution might be just what you need.
Enterprise data is anything but uniform. Which is why your data protection, backup and recovery solution needs to cover the full range of data sources, file types, storage media and backup modes — from snapshots to streaming.
Data protection help you deploy the right kind of protection for any type of data. With all that diversity, the last thing you want is to maintain a single point solution for each distinct backup and recovery requirement. Our automated data protection solutions gives you a single, complete view of all your stored data no matter where it is — on-premises or in the cloud.
IT environments are comprised of an assortment of critical and non-critical systems. An end-to-end data protection platform that aligns the right technology for each system can help you lower costs and simplify business continuity.
Disaster Recovery
Our DR Service recovers your data to multiple destinations like public cloud, private cloud, local storage etc. With a single and unified management platform you can back up and restore anything individual files, disks, or entire systems in minutes.
Data Backup
It is essential that you always back up your important information and have a plan for recovering from a system failure. An attacker could crash a computer's operating system or data may be corrupted or wiped out by a hardware problem. Computers can be lost, stolen, or destroyed in a fire or other catastrophe.