It truly is an amazing product. You should download the free 30-day eval and 
play with it.

Clyde



-- Sent from my Palm Pre
On Jun 7, 2010 6:25 PM, Kurt Buff <kurt.b...@gmail.com> wrote: 

Interesting. If I have reason to investigate, I'll keep them in mind.



Thanks.



On Mon, Jun 7, 2010 at 16:11, Clyde Bennett <cbenn...@cwbserv.com> wrote:

> No, they do not do dedupe. Their selling point is that they do an image 
backup up your entire server, they use VSS so you can restore your Exchange 
database, you can create images in real time, it supports hardware independent 
restore, meaning that if something goes wrong, you can do a restore to 
disparate hardware or to a virtual image, AND, with their new exchange granular 
restore optional module, all you have to do to restore someone's deleted 
contact or email is to ask them when it was there last, mount an image of the 
volume that contains the store from a time prior to that time, and extract the 
lost email directly from the store.

>

> Clyde W. Bennett, President

> Clyde Bennett & Associates

> 1011A S. Congress Ave.

> Austin, Texas 78704-1126

> (512) 442-3744

> fax (512) 442-4014

> www.cwbserv.com

> cbenn...@cwbserv.com

>

>

>

>

>

>

> -----Original Message-----

> From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]

> Sent: Monday, June 07, 2010 4:45 PM

> To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

> Subject: Re: System Back-up solution.

>

> What's their selling point in this conversation? Do they do dedupe?

>

> Kurt

>

> On Mon, Jun 7, 2010 at 14:36, Clyde Bennett <cbenn...@cwbserv.com> 
wrote:

>> Kurt:

>>

>> Storagecraft has a SAAS (Software as a service) option where you pay 
approx $40 per month for the software. That gets you maintenance and upgrades 
as well.

>>

>> Clyde W. Bennett, President

>> Clyde Bennett & Associates

>> 1011A S. Congress Ave.

>> Austin, Texas 78704-1126

>> (512) 442-3744

>> fax (512) 442-4014

>> www.cwbserv.com

>> cbenn...@cwbserv.com

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>>

>> -----Original Message-----

>> From: Kurt Buff [mailto:kurt.b...@gmail.com]

>> Sent: Monday, June 07, 2010 4:34 PM

>> To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues

>> Subject: Re: System Back-up solution.

>>

>> dedupe indeed expensive. I've priced it - we went from TSM to

>> Ultrabac, and I priced out a number of other packages during the eval.

>> Given our budgetary restrictions, the UB was the best we could do.

>>

>> On Mon, Jun 7, 2010 at 14:29, Bill Songstad 
<bsongs...@gmail.com> wrote:

>>> I don't duplicate for onsite.  I have the live copy 
and a raid 5 "copy",

>>> Then I have the current backup onsite and the week-old backup 
offsite.  Long

>>> term, we keep 2 years on site from disks rotated out 
quarterly.  Then

>>> purge.  Our backups are really for DR only.  Nobody 
wants to restore

>>> anything over 90 days; certainly not stuff that is years 
old.  Two years is

>>> more than I think we need, but it is a service/faux security 
blanket to

>>> users.  We aren't legally bound to retain anything not in 
live use except in

>>> the case of lawsuit.  Then we'd just buy more disks.

>>>

>>> My only suggestion to you is breaking your network apart an doing 
separate

>>> backups.  You may be better off graduating to a data 
management solution

>>> with deduplication. $$

>>>

>>> -Bill

>>>

>>> On Mon, Jun 7, 2010 at 12:43 PM, Kurt Buff 
<kurt.b...@gmail.com> wrote:

>>>>

>>>> So, not a huge amount of data. 500gb drives are pretty cheap, 
fer sher.

>>>>

>>>> Do you duplicate the drives for local storage before sending 
them

>>>> offsite, or is it in a RAID array that you can break the 
mirror on, or

>>>> even just replace both drives as part of your rotation?

>>>>

>>>> Do you need to worry about longer term archiving?

>>>>

>>>> We use D2D2T, and my problem is that I backup about 2.5tb over 
a

>>>> weekend, and it takes a long time - if I start on Friday 
evening at

>>>> 17:00, my last full backup (just to disk!) ends on Monday 
mid-morning.

>>>> Since I then have to trickle to tape, and I have chosen to 
duplicate

>>>> the full to a second copy on tape for offsite storage, it 
takes until

>>>> Wednesday to finish.

>>>>

>>>> Kurt

>>>>

>>>> On Mon, Jun 7, 2010 at 12:20, Bill Songstad 
<bsongs...@gmail.com> wrote:

>>>> > Not a lot of data being backed up.

>>>> > Exchange= 11 GB 30 minutes

>>>> > File server= 60 GB 4hrs

>>>> > DB server= 25 GB 2 hrs

>>>> > Web/backup server= 15 GB 30 minutes

>>>> >

>>>> > Each server except exchange does one full and 4 
incrementals.  Exchange

>>>> > is

>>>> > full every day.  I'm careful not to overlap jobs so 
nothing starts

>>>> > within a

>>>> > half hour of finish time for anything else.  So 
Monday night basically

>>>> > takes

>>>> > all night to get everything.  All the week's backups 
fit on a 500GB disk

>>>> > with plenty of room.  Each week we take last 
week's disk to a

>>>> > nearby safedeposit box when we send our bank deposit.

>>>> >

>>>> > Naturally that won't work for everybody, but if you can 
handle a lengthy

>>>> > reinstall window, and risking a whole week's backup 
onsite, it is dirt

>>>> > cheap.  And way more reliable than my tapes ever 
were.

>>>> >

>>>> > -Bill

>>>> > On Mon, Jun 7, 2010 at 11:36 AM, Kurt Buff 
<kurt.b...@gmail.com> wrote:

>>>> >>

>>>> >> How much data are you backing up?

>>>> >>

>>>> >> What does your backup rotation look like?

>>>> >>

>>>> >> How long are your backup times?

>>>> >>

>>>> >> Do you rotate your media to secure offsite storage?

>>>> >>

>>>> >> Kurt

>>>> >>

>>>> >> On Mon, Jun 7, 2010 at 11:31, Bill Songstad 
<bsongs...@gmail.com>

>>>> >> wrote:

>>>> >> > I pitched tapes a few years ago, and never 
looked back.  I back up

>>>> >> > exchange

>>>> >> > over the network with NTbackup run from a 
scheduled task script

>>>> >> > on W2k3

>>>> >> > server.  The backup destination has $20 
drive trays attached to a hot

>>>> >> > swappable SATA controller.  I put in my own 
Sata Drives and rotate

>>>> >> > them

>>>> >> > by

>>>> >> > hand weekly.  Very reliable.  Almost 
free.  I do a test restore

>>>> >> > weekly

>>>> >> > and

>>>> >> > have not had a failure in two years.  I 
think many more people spend

>>>> >> > thousands on a backup solution for exchange 
than really need to.

>>>> >> >

>>>> >> > -Bill

>>>> >> >

>>>> >> > On Mon, Jun 7, 2010 at 10:13 AM, Doug Rooney

>>>> >> > <d...@sonomatilemakers.com>

>>>> >> > wrote:

>>>> >> >>

>>>> >> >> Greetings all.

>>>> >> >>

>>>> >> >> We currently have DLT VS1 tape back-up as 
well as USB 2.0 connected

>>>> >> >> external drives.

>>>> >> >>

>>>> >> >> We are using Backup Exec for the tapes and 
custom batch programs for

>>>> >> >> the

>>>> >> >> external drives, which by the way are 
connected on a separate

>>>> >> >> back-up

>>>> >> >> server.

>>>> >> >>

>>>> >> >> Our tapes are old and have many failures, 
upper management has

>>>> >> >> decided

>>>> >> >> to

>>>> >> >> abandon tapes and go only with external 
drives.

>>>> >> >>

>>>> >> >> My question is, has anyone done this? What 
software do you use, Pros

>>>> >> >> /

>>>> >> >> Cons.

>>>> >> >>

>>>> >> >> The problem I am experiencing now is in 
order to back-up the data

>>>> >> >> bases, I

>>>> >> >> need to take them off-line.

>>>> >> >>

>>>> >> >> Thank you for any advice you can offer.

>>>> >> >>

>>>> >> >> (Exchange 2003, Windows 2003, one set of 
external drives are 500GB

>>>> >> >> the

>>>> >> >> other is 250GB)

>>>> >> >>

>>>> >> >>

>>>> >> >>

>>>> >> >> Thank You

>>>> >> >>

>>>> >> >> ~Doug Rooney

>>>> >> >> Sonoma Tilemakers

>>>> >> >> IT Manager

>>>> >> >> 7750 Bell Rd.

>>>> >> >> Windsor Ca, 95492

>>>> >> >> i...@sonomatilemakers.com

>>>> >> >

>>>> >>

>>>> >>

>>>> >

>>>> >

>>>>

>>>>

>>>

>>>

>>

>>

>>

>

>

>






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