RAID Array Backup
RAID (Redundant Array of In-line
Disks ) is expensive, requires regular consistency checks and only protects
against one form of data loss: the failure of a single hard drive.
1. Affordability: Costly Hardware & Admin
RAID Arrays cost many hundreds to many
thousands of dollars; You must purchase and maintain RAID the controllers and
dedicated hard drives. To manage RAID properly (RAID 5) you also will need to
purchase a dedicated server that supports Hot-Swap Hard Drives, Several
Hot-swap Hard Drives and spares, and a SCSI RAID controller. The Server, the
RAID controller and the Hard Drive firmware will need periodic updates, and
eventually will need replaced as technology standards change. All this will
have to be maintained by either in-house staff or highly paid consultants.
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2. Reliability:
Failure-Prone Drives, Data Corruption
Software mirrors are notoriously
problematic. They will slow system performance and the often fail when you need
them the most, when one hard drive dies. Hardware RAID is more robust, but it can
only protect you from the failure of a single hard drive. The real purpose of
Hardware RAID is not data protection at all, but to increase access speed. Even
the best RAID Array scheme is still very vulnerable to data corruption,
viruses, hackers, and disgruntled employees.
Hard drives can and do fail, and if you
have not run consistency checks regularly on the RAID array, you may be unable
to rebuild the failed drive. What if you lose two hard drives at once? Often
the very issue that caused the hard drive failure will kill more than one drive
at a time. Power surges, brownouts or blackouts -- like California experienced
again and again a few years ago -- will often kill several hard drives at once.
A RAID Controller gone bad, a CPU that goes bad, or even a bad stick of RAM can
corrupt your data quickly - leaving you with a whole array of corrupt
data! |
3. Data Protection:
Not Offsite is Not Alright
Unless your data is taken offsite every
night you fail to protect data against natural disasters (fire, flood,
hurricane, tornado, lightning, solar flares and earthquakes), not to mention
theft, disgruntled employees and sabotage. |
4. Data Security:
Physical Location = Inherent Risks
Where is your server and RAID array
stored? Do you have a dedicated server room with controlled access? Or could
someone willfully or accidentally pull the plug on the server and compromise
your data? Even with a dedicated server room, accidents can and do happen. Is
your data being backed up offsite every day? If not your business is at
risk! |
5. Convenience: Install
& Admin Demands
Creating and administering a RAID array
and dedicated file server, or even an less complicated IDE mirror system, means
getting inside your computers, installing drivers, updating firmware, running
consistency checks and more. You can hire an expensive professional, pay a
high-priced consultant, or just let RDB protect your data at our two mirrored
data centers, using our cutting-edge technology to protect your data and free
yourself to run your business. Rest assured, your data is protected with Remote
Data Backups! |
6. The Real Purpose of
RAID: A Misconception?
The real purpose of a RAID array is not
data backup at all. RAID was created to increase the speed of accessing files
(data throughput), and increase the logical size of a "hard drive." Given how
often any given hard drive fails, it was essential that RAID be designed with
built in redundancy. (The ability to survive the loss of a hard drive, and
replace the failed drive without a system crash.) But don't confuse hard drive
redundancy with a true Backup - no IT professional worth his salt would ever
consider using RAID as a substitute for a reliable daily backup - and neither
should you. Protect yourself with Remote Data Backups! |
7. Remote File Access:
Costly, Insecure, Network
Unless you have a dedicated Remote
Access Server (RAS) or a Virtual Private Network, you can't readily access data
stored on your RAID array. This is an expensive scheme, and it will also end up
creating a potential security threat to all your network and your data! Remote
Data Backups uses AES encryption, the same encryption that our Federal
government uses to transmit classified documents. You can easily configure any
of your accounts to be able to access data securely from any other
account. |
8. File Versioning:
Not Available
RAID Arrays only keep one file version.
With Remote Data Backups, we keep up to 10-File versions. Did you make an
unwanted change to an active file that you now wish you hadn't made? You can
easily retrieve an older version. |
9. Full System Backup: Only with RAID 1
You can back up your entire hard drive
with RAID 1 (a mirror). But with a software mirror, recovery typically is an
extremely cumbersome, time intensive and failure-prone process. A Hardware
MIRROR (RAID -0) is more robust, but is also much more expensive and still only
protects you against one type of data loss - hard drive failure. With any RAID
array you still need a TRUE BACKUP SOLUTION - Remote Data Backups is automatic,
and protects your critical data, securely, and offsite each night! |
10. Support: Hiring High-Paid
Professionals
Do you have a highly skilled technology
staff to handle the administration of your RAID array and server? Or will you
have to pay high priced professional consultants to service and maintain them?
Why not use our state-of-the-art data centers to backup your data and utilize
our FREE 24/7 support staff. Our 10 GB backup plan costs less than $1 a day!
Even if you use RAID, you still need reliable backup, why not use Remote Data
Backups! |
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 Remote Data Backups is the most
affordable, convenient, secure and reliable backup solution
available.
 > Free
30-Day Trial >
Learn More
 Which obsolete backup plan are you using or
considering?
 Just the time you spend on manual
backups will probably cost you more than a year of RDB's 10 GB auto
backups.

5-10 minutes / day * 260 weekdays /
yr * $20 / hr (tax etc.) ------------------ $433.00 $866.00 /
yr
 Setting up an internal backup plan
from scratch is a significant risk and investment in time and money. Steps:
- Product Research
- Buy Hardware, Software
- Buy Replaceable Media
- Setup & Training
- Manual Backups Daily
- Take Offsite Daily
- Offsite Storage Costs
- Maintenance & Repair
Why reinvent the wheel when we've
already perfected it?

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