• The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
Menu
  • The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Mountains Of Data Bring Recovery Issues

    July 7, 2014 Dan Burger

    If IBM pushed any harder on promoting “The Cloud,” it would rain for 40 days and 40 nights. Investments have been made in technologies such as PowerVM, SmartCloud management products, and Live Partition Mobility. And you can’t undervalue the investments from the managed service providers (MSPs) and the independent software vendors (ISVs).

    “We see a revenue shift from the traditional buy/sell business to ‘the cloud’ and managed services,” says Jim Kandrac, who makes his living selling cloud-based backup and recovery services and remote hardware for disaster recovery and high availability. Kandrac’s business model relies a combination of IBM Power Systems and Intel servers to handle the managed service business he refers to as backup as a service (BaaS) and infrastructure as a service (IaaS). His company, United Computer Group (UCG), is equipped to handle online backups of databases from 10 GB to 100 TB.

    From June 2013 to June 2014, Kandrac says UCG net monthly recurring revenue (MRR) from backup as a service and remote hardware recovery has increased more than 33 percent. He says UCG is on track to double MRR every three years.

    This doesn’t prove MSPs are getting more disaster recovery business than any other kind of cloud-based business, but it is another piece of evidence that BaaS is lifting the cloud. MSPs consider disaster recovery as the gateway to the software as a service and the lucrative services business.

    “We’ve been doing backup and recovery for eight years,” Kandrac says. “There has always been a situation where the IBM i people were doing their thing and the AIX and Windows people were doing what they do. Now we are getting calls from mostly IBM i people who have had some bad experiences on the Intel side. Things didn’t work as advertised. Too much pipe, too much data, problems compressing data, and trouble connecting to the remote location are some of the problems we’ve heard from the Intel side. Our business has improved because of this.”

    The challenge on the Intel side has not been on with archiving, but on restoring because companies that used to have gigabytes of data are now breaking into the terabyte range. Several terabytes of data (what Kandrac estimates is reality for 85 percent of his customers) are unable to restore in a timely matter unless they move to a high availability environment, which for some companies is a great idea, but for a lot of companies is overkill. Kandrac says hybrid solutions using solid state disk will be the way this problem is solved of getting 24-hour restores (what most UCG customers require) without the cost (almost double) of HA. It’s happening now, but it’s not commonplace. As companies increase from 4 TB to 8 TB to 12 TB of data, at the current capability levels of rebuilding data, the 24-hour recovery is unattainable.

    “The trend I see is that the Intel guys are talking to the i guys because the Intel guys tried something that didn’t work,” he says.

    That’s opening the door for companies like Kandrac’s that can do both.

    RELATED STORIES

    IBM i Finds A Place In The Cloud

    Logicalis Touts Cloud as IBM i Skill-Replacement Solution

    Avnet To Resell SoftLayer Cloud, But No IBM i Slices

    Deconstructing IBM i Cloud Migration Myths

    The i Cloud Wasn’t Built In A Day

    UCG Launches VAULT400 Reports



                         Post this story to del.icio.us
                   Post this story to Digg
        Post this story to Slashdot

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    Tags:

    Sponsored by
    New Generation Software

    FREE Webinar:

    Creating Great Data for Enterprise AI

    Enterprise AI relies on many data sources and types, but every AI project needs a data quality, governance, and security plan.

    Wherever and however you want to analyze your data, adopting modern ETL and BI software like NGS-IQ is a great way to support your effort.

    Webinar: June 26, 2025

    RSVP today.

    www.ngsi.com – 800-824-1220

    Share this:

    • Reddit
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Email

    DB2 for i 7.2 Features and Fun, Part 1 IBM i: Still a Great Fit for Manhattan Associates WMS

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Volume 24, Number 23 -- July 7, 2014
THIS ISSUE SPONSORED BY:

Maxava
Infinite Corporation
inFORM Decisions
Manta Technologies
Shield Advanced Solutions

Table of Contents

  • HelpSystems Grows With RJS And Coglin Mill Acquisitions
  • Still A Community Of Common Interest
  • The New Normal For The IBM i Job Market
  • As I See It: Midlife With Crisis
  • Maxava Puts Up Another $50,000 For iFoundation Grants
  • Reader Feedback On Power S814 Power8 Running IBM i
  • Mountains Of Data Bring Recovery Issues
  • Modernization Redbook: The Time Has Come
  • Gartner Shaves IT Spending Projections For 2014 Again
  • IT Does Its Part For U.S. Job Growth In June

Content archive

  • The Four Hundred
  • Four Hundred Stuff
  • Four Hundred Guru

Recent Posts

  • Big Blue Raises IBM i License Transfer Fees, Other Prices
  • Keep The IBM i Youth Movement Going With More Training, Better Tools
  • Remain Begins Migrating DevOps Tools To VS Code
  • IBM Readies LTO-10 Tape Drives And Libraries
  • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Number 23
  • SEU’s Fate, An IBM i V8, And The Odds Of A Power13
  • Tandberg Bankruptcy Leaves A Hole In IBM Power Storage
  • RPG Code Generation And The Agentic Future Of IBM i
  • A Bunch Of IBM i-Power Systems Things To Be Aware Of
  • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Numbers 21 And 22

Subscribe

To get news from IT Jungle sent to your inbox every week, subscribe to our newsletter.

Pages

  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Contributors
  • Four Hundred Monitor
  • IBM i PTF Guide
  • Media Kit
  • Subscribe

Search

Copyright © 2025 IT Jungle