Ask them where they were on 9-11-2001.  Are they totally brain dead?

Paul D. Seay, Jr.
Technical Specialist
Naptheon, INC
757-688-8180


-----Original Message-----
From: Dan Foster [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, June 13, 2002 11:25 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Keeping an handle on client systems' large drives


I've always been curious about something.

How do you keep an handle on the fact that commodity PC storage is growing
at a far faster rate than tape capacity/system is?

For example, if I had a small LAN of about 300 PCs -- let's say, an academic
or corporate departmental LAN environment... each has at least a 40 GB HD,
and probably a fair amount of apps and files on them. In the stores, I see
drives up to 160 GB, with even larger ones on the way!

So let's say, an average of 25 GB utilization per system... a single full
backup would be about 7.5 TB, which is quite a few tapes ;) Not everybody is
using LTO or higher capacity.

So do those sites rely purely on the incrementals to save you? Or some site
specific policy such as tailoring backups to exclude (let's say) C:\Program
Files, or some such...? Just wondering.

Not every site is lucky enough to be able to convince the beancounters the
merits of having a backup system that keeps up with the needs of the end
users, even if it means one has to explain doomsday predictions on the
business bottom line -- they invariably hear that then say "Oh, pshaw,
you're just exaggerating because you want money...". It sucks to be the one
that's right ;) And the ones who warns well before a nasty event occurs may
also be the first one to be fired out of spite after something happens and
gets the blame for not having prevented it.

-Dan Foster
IP Systems Engineering (IPSE)
Global Crossing Telecommunications

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