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More About This Textbook
Overview
Businesses now rely almost entirely on applications and databases, causing data and storage needs to increase at astounding rates. It is therefore imperative for a company to optimize and simplify the complexity of managing its data resources.
Plenty of storage products are now available, however the challenge remains for companies to proactively manage their storage assets and align the resources to the various departments, divisions, geographical locations and business processes to achieve improved efficiency and profitability. Data Lifecycles identifies ways to incorporate an intelligent service platform to manage and map the storage of data. The authors give an overview of the latest trends and technologies in storage networking and cover critical issues such as world-wide compliance.
Data Lifecycles:
This text is an ideal introduction to modern data lifecycle management for network managers, system administrators, storage/system architects, network managers, information management directors as well as CIO/CTOs and their teams, senior IT managers and decision makers, and database administrators.
Editorial Reviews
From the Publisher
"This quick and easy read is recommended for decision makers…" (Computing Reviews.com, May 31, 2007)Product Details
Related Subjects
Meet the Author
Roger Reid is an Enterprise Storage Architect for VERITAS Software Corporation with over ten years’ combined industry experience supporting various Fortune 500 customers in architecting and implementing a variety of storage solutions including storage area networks, storage virtualization, active storage resource management, backup and hierarchal storage management products.
Gareth Fraser-King is the Manager for Product Marketing in the European, Middle East, and African emerging territories producing high level messaging, white papers, articles, presentations, and marketing deliverables. He has worked as a writer and marketer for over 20 years, the last 10 within the IT industry, and possesses a wide range of marketing experience, including copywriting, business, technical and service authoring, as well as business development, operation efficiency, strategic planning, affinity marketing, product development and quality management.
Table of Contents
Preface.
Who should read this book.
Purpose of this book.
1 Introducing Utility Computing.
1.1 Real problems and real solutions.
1.2 New storage management.
2 The Changing IT Imperative.
2.1 Introduction to utility computing.
2.2 General market highlights.
2.3 Real challenges and opportunities.
2.4 Summary.
3 Being Compliant.
3.1 So what are the regulations?
3.2 Financial services companies.
3.3 Telecommunications companies.
3.4 Utilities companies.
3.5 Public authorities and government.
3.6 Managing data for compliance is just a specialised form of data management.
3.7 Just plain junk data!
3.8 The bottom line–what is mandated?
4 Data Taxonomy.
4.1 A new data management consciousness level.
4.2 Data personification.
4.3 Classification model and framework.
4.4 Customer reporting.
4.5 Summary.
5 Email Retention.
5.1 Email management to achieve compliance.
5.2 What is archiving?
5.3 How should organisations manage their email records?
5.4 Email retention policies are for life–not just for Christmas.
5.5 How companies can gain competitive advantage using compliance.
5.6 What laws govern email retention?
5.7 Write once, secure against tampering.
5.8 Storage recommendations for email.
5.9 Conclusion.
6 Security.
6.1 Alerting organisations to threats.
6.2 Protecting data and IT systems.
6.3 Conclusions.
Reference.
7 Data Lifecycles and Tiered Storage Architectures.
7.1 Tiered storage defined.
7.2 RAID review.
7.3 Tape-based solutions.
7.4 Recoverability of data: you get what you pay for.
7.5 Conclusion.
Bibliography.
Recommended Reading.
8 Continuous Data Protection (CDP).
8.1 Introduction.
8.2 CDP data-taps.
8.3 CDP operations.
8.4 Conclusion.
9 What is the Cost of an IT Outage?
9.1 Failure is not an option.
9.2 Finding the elusive ROI.
9.3 Building a robust and resilient infrastructure.
9.4 Conclusion–Analysing business impact.
10 Business Impact.
10.1 Business impact.
10.2 The paradigm shift in the way IT does business.
10.3 The Holy Grail: standard software platform.
10.4 Summary.
Bibliography.
11 Integration.
11.1 Understanding compliance requirements.
11.2 Understanding hardware and its constructions.
11.3 Understanding user expectations.
11.4 Knowing the capabilities of your data management tools.
11.5 Solution integration–business data and workflow applications.
11.6 A ten-point plan to successful DLM, ILM and TLM strategy.
11.7 Conclusion.
References.
Index.