Things break and the DBA must be prepared for situations where a failure impacts the availability, integrity, or usability of a database. Reacting to failures and service disruptions is a key ...
In today’s digital world, businesses constantly face cyber threats, making disaster recovery planning crucial for operational, reputational, and financial protection. In this article I will talk about ...
MOST IMPACTED BY APRIL’S SEVERE WEATHER. THIS INCLUDES HARDIN COUNTY, WHERE RESIDENTS ARE NOT ONLY DEALING WITH CLEANUP, BUT ALSO CONTINUED FLOODING. WLKY’S MADISON ELLIOTT HEADED THERE TODAY TO GET A ...
Disaster recovery is not a simple process. It takes months, even years, for communities to distribute aid, rebuild, and begin to move forward. Your landscape and community has likely changed in many ...
In Part I of this two-part series I discussed how in my extensive career in emergency management at various government levels, I’ve led successful agencies through accreditation processes. Recognizing ...
AI-powered continuous testing and simulation is transforming disaster recovery into a proactive, self-updating system that prevents catastrophic data losses.
Disasters come in all sizes, from a hurricane or nuclear reactor breach to a local wind blowing down a power line. And, disasters can strike at any time, most often when a business is least prepared.
Disruptive events can affect an organization in multiple ways, but with the right strategy and practice CISOs can minimize downtime and accelerate the recovery process. On the morning of August 30, ...
As companies continue shifting mission-critical systems to the cloud, they’re discovering that 24/7/365 reliability isn’t a given. Even brief outages can interrupt sales, slow internal workflows and ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Milwaukee area residents impacted by the historic early August flooding will soon be able to seek direct assistance at two new ...
A key distinction in the realm of disaster recovery is the one between failover and failback. Both terms describe two sides of the same coin, complementary processes that are often brought together.