BaaS is different from traditional backup because it is managed by an experienced service provider that removes the daily burden of backup management from your IT staff and provides well-architected solutions that consider industry best practices.

Derek Brost and Jeff Ton discuss a two pronged approach to combatting ransomware; both preventative and restorative measures.

With the list of possible disruptive events that can take a business offline growing in number year over year, it’s no surprise so many organizations’ leaders are now asking IT departments to strengthen their stance against these threats. But what role can DRaaS and the cloud play in ensuring this greater resiliency?

Ryan Brubaker, CIO and Executive Vice President of Operations at Seven Corners, takes us on their path to the cloud.

Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS), like its cousin Backup as a Service (BaaS), provides technology to ensure business continuity, a target site and infrastructure, and the management of the process that it takes to ensure its success—all delivered to you as a service. The key for DRaaS is that the target site and infrastructure are in the cloud, rather than in a on-premises datacenter as a traditional DR solution might usually entail. The management is provided by a team of professionals who live and breathe DR and backups, which allows your IT staff to reallocate valuable time to business projects of greater daily importance.

InterVision announces it has been awarded a contract for Amazon Connect through CALNET, the California Department of Technology’s program.

In this episode Dustin Milberg, Field CTO of Cloud Services, dissects the tools needed for the cloud journey, with a focus on the 6 layers of the platform. 

Dustin Milberg, Field CTO of Cloud Services, dissects the process aspect of the cloud journey in this 2nd installment of our cloud series.

More than half (62%) of recent survey respondents say they have experienced stalled or slower-than-expected cloud migration. Most believe the delay in cloud migration is primarily due to unanticipated skills gaps (41%).