Windows Does Not Recognize Ibm Lto3 3580
I'm trying to install a new Tape IBM 3580 in my server. I'm runing Windows 2003 in a HP ML110 G2, but I can't figure out how to get this working. I've attached Tape SCSI interface at Adaptec 2120S. During boot process, SCSI Card recognize new tape device. After installed driver from IBM site just appear Tape Bus Enumerator, not Tape Unit. I'm using CA Brighstor to manage, but, if Windows does not recognize, I can't use in Brightstor. Lto 3 tapesHow to remove a Quick i/o file on solaris?
Hi All , we have a running solaris and veritas quick i/o files for oracle 9i database . The files no longer exist in the database but somehow exist in the file system . How do we remove the veritas files from the filesystem ? lrwxrwxrwx 1 oracle oinstall 36 Sep 16 2011 b2bprddb_undotbs2.dbf03 -> .b2bprddb_undotbs2.dbf03::cdev:vxfs: -rw-r--r-- 1 oracle oinstall 2097160192 Oct 21 11:13 .b2bprddb_undotbs2.dbf03 lrwxrwxrwx 1 oracle oinstall 34 Sep 11 2011 javazone_data01.dbf09 -> .javazone_data01.dbf09::cdev:vxfs: -rw-r--r-- 1 oracle oinstall 2097160192 Sep 11 2011 .javazone_data01.dbf09 lrwxrwxrwx 1 oracle oinstall 35 Dec 7 2010 javazone_index01.dbf06 -> .javazone_index01.dbf06::cdev:vxfs: -rw-r--r-- 1 oracle oinstall 1572872192 Dec 7 2010 .javazone_index01.dbf062KViews0likes0CommentsAutomatización para envio de alertas al correo electronico
Hola, estoy necesitando ayuda, ya que estoy en este momento manejando un Clariion CX3 20f y tenemos que automatizarlo. Queremos que nos envie las alertas de errores que puedan surgir de forma automatica al correo electronico de la empresa o un mensaje de texto al telefono celular. Pero no logro encontrar nada en la red que me permite realizar este proceso. Alguien pudo conseguir esto? Saludos.-SolvedIt’s Time to Reduce Cost and Complexity
Whilst company revenues are expected to increase throughout 2015, IT budgets are largely expected to remain at 2014 levels[1] driving the need for IT teams to deliver more to the business with the same, or less resource. The end of support life of Windows Server 2003 in July 2015 will be a driver for many organizations to review hardware and software estates; to look to new technologies in an effort to take account of flat or declining budgets. Although it often becomes an afterthought, backup and recovery can consume a significant portion of budget not in terms of product purchase necessarily but in terms of staff cost: skills required to manage complexity with so many facets to the infrastructure. Despite industry analyst recommendations[2], some organisations continue to make use of multiple products to protect the different platforms or technologies within their environment. Business productivity is driven by innovation not by underlying process. Backup Exec 15 can be purchased, maintained and renewed through a single, all-inclusive license meter that enables full functionality; deployed, managed and upgraded centrally. Combined with a robust architecture which maximises reliability Backup Exec 15 helps you spend less time ‘doing backup.’ It’s Time for backup and recovery that gives your time back. It’s Time for Backup Exec 15. Join the conversation #ItsTimeForBE15 [1] Spiceworks 2015 Budget Report [2] IDC, Unified Data Protection for Physical and Virtual Environments, January 2014It’s Time to Keep Pace with Data Growth
Over many years the increasing growth of data has been of significance to IT teams looking to access, manage and protect company information. That data now resides in a greater quantity of ever more disparate locations within or outside one geographical location. Estimates suggest that global data will reach 7.9 Zetabytes in 2015, up from 1.2 Zetabytes in 2010. Furthermore the same estimates forecast that number will have increased to around 40 Zetabytes by 2020.[1] Today over 60% of that data is unstructured and therefore in many cases, unmanaged and potentially difficult to protect and restore. Whilst many conversations circulate around big data and driving value from vast quantities of data, the day-to-day issue for most organisations is one of meeting and improving recovery point and recovery time objectives (RPO and RTO). Powerful, integrated technologies enable more frequent backups and rapid recovery across physical, virtual and cloud, different operating systems and applications. Ever-increasing volumes of data across a wide range of platforms and applications impact recovery objectives. Backup Exec 15 enables intelligent protection of information that brings recovery points closer and recovery times shorter, maximising available infrastructure resources. Backups take place more frequently, restore is completed as soon as it’s needed. Once captured that data is easily transitioned and repurposed in virtual infrastructure for test, development and analytics. It’s Time for backup and recovery that outperforms expectations. It’s Time for Backup Exec 15. Join the conversation #ItsTimeForBE15 [1] IDC, Digital Universe study, December 2012 IDC, Worldwide Disk-Based Data Protection and Recovery 2012-2016 Forecast, December 2012It’s Time to Extend Your Virtual and Cloud Infrastructures
Well understood as drivers of change in IT departments throughout EMEA with an adoption rate for server virtualization of 79% and cloud adoption of 56%[1] these two continue to proliferate messages of cost benefits and simplification. Perhaps we consider cloud as ‘virtual that somebody else does for me’ and gain a better understanding of the nature of where information is stored. Whilst the adoption of public cloud storage for backup in EMEA remains well behind adoption of web hosting, email hosting, content filtering and productivity solutions it does demand a new level of flexibility in planning information protection for both the short and longer term futures. We find ourselves moving rapidly from static, largely on-premise, physical infrastructures that are designed and built to last for a number of years, to infrastructures which are specifically designed to account for and embrace change across a wide variety of platforms, technologies and delivery mechanisms: physical, virtual and cloud. IT infrastructure is no longer built to last, but built to change across a combination of virtual, physical and cloud. You can take confidence in Backup Exec 15’s breadth and depth of integrated capabilities and have the flexibility to make business-centric decisions for IT, safe in the knowledge that information is protected and recoverable whatever your platform or technology. It’s Time for backup and recovery that enables choice. It’s Time for Backup Exec 15. Join the conversation #ItsTimeForBE15 [1] Spiceworks “State of IT” Report, January 2015