Think Your Tape Drive Is A Smart Way To Back Up Your Data?
You Won't After Reading This...
FACT #1:
The average failure rate of disk and tape drives is 1000%! Incredible, isn't it? Most people don't realize that ALL tape drives fail at some point. Butr what's really dangerous is that most companies don't realize that their tape drives have failed until after they try to recover the data stored on them. Only then do they realize that the backups stopped workign long ago or that the data is corrupt and can't be resored
FACT #2:
Having a copy of your data on a tape backup or in some other format does NOT - and I repeat does NOT - gaurantee a fast recovcery of your data or network. Most people don't realize that a data backup doesn't include all your software and settings. If you had to restore your server using your backup data, you would first hav to re-install all your software programs and configure the settins. Only then could you install all the data - the entire process can easily take several days.
FACT #3:
If you keeep your backup onsite, it could be worthless to you in the event of a fire, flood or even a power surge. Smart business owners ALWAYS keep an offsite copy of their data.
Free Report gives you a
The final Internet 9 release was released in March 2011,
one year after the first Internet Explorer 9 beta preview was unveiled, and
about a year and a half after the browser was originally demonstrated during the
Windows 7 launch in October 2009.
America’s favorite – Well… since it comes pre-installed on
every Windows PC sold, let’s just call it America’s most installed Web browser –
is back for another round. And with
its market share sliding, Microsoft seems like it might actually want to impress
us this time around. Internet
Explorer 9 rises to the challenge with an impressive new set of features –
including some you can’t find in any other browser.
Check out some of the new and noteworthy additions to Internet Explorer
9.
Hardware
Acceleration
Internet Explorer 9 employs your computer’s graphics
processor to render Web pages. The
result: Your CPU can take a breather, and pages still load faster.
Compact Interface
Microsoft has finally gotten the hint about toolbars and
icons cluttering up the user experience, and condensed Internet Explorer 9 into
one of the most minimalist browsers out there.
Even the address bar and tabs bar, which share different rows in Chrome,
have been crushed together onto one line to save vertical space.
While you can restore the old stuff with a simple right click, this is
the most stripped down – and clean - Internet Explorer has ever looked.
Windows 7
Integration
You had to know Microsoft would leverage its position as
the maker of Windows 7 to make Internet Explorer 9 play nicer with the operating
system than any other browser. With
this iteration, you can pin websites to the taskbar as shortcuts the same way
you typically would with a program, making it easy to access your favorite sites
with one click, whether you have a browser open or not.
Address Bar Search
Google Chrome’s most revolutionary original feature has
finally made it over to Internet Explorer 9.
One bar handles both addresses and search terms, so you don’t have to
decide which you’re entering and tab over to the right box.
About Time!
Performance Advisor
Plug-ins and add-ons are great… until you accumulate so
many your browser crawls under the weight of them... Microsoft has wisely
started accounting for the extra weight with a new performance manager that
shows you exactly how long in fractions of a second, each new addition tacks
onto your browser load and navigation time.
New Tab Features
A revamped “new tab” page in Internet Explorer 9
automatically arranges the sites you most frequently visit, and color codes them
with bars that indicate how much time you spend on them.
You can also “tear off” tabs to produce new windows.
Should you install
Internet Explorer 9?
All I can say is test and then test some more before
deploying this application in your business.
It’s ok to be on the leading edge of technology, but stay away from the
“bleeding’ edge.