Ctg sit23 hub banner.jpg

British Legion improves disaster recovery

New system is intended to save power and money

The new system will help the British Legion save up to 30 per cent on server power

Charity the Royal British Legion has installed a storage system to protect critical data and recover faster from disasters.

The charity has installed a storage area network (SAN) from EqualLogic at an offsite location.

'We wanted to improve our disaster recovery processes to achieve a much quicker set-up and recovery time compared to the tape-based system we had in place,' said Richard Lovelock, head of IT.

Retrieving information from tapes can take as long as a day, whereas retrieving information from a SAN can be done in minutes.

When data no longer becomes critical, the Royal British Legion backs it up from the SAN to tapes.

The solution also means that the Royal British legion does not necessarily have to invoke complete disaster recovery, as information can be selectively retrieved.

Lovelock also expects the system to provide the charity with cost savings.

'Because we are consolidating servers and storage we think we are going to save quite a bit of power,' he said. 'We think we can probably save 20-30 per cent of power on individual servers. That might save us between £5,000 and £7,000 a year.'

You may also like

Tata's UK gigafactory project takes major step forward
/news/4338523/tatas-uk-gigafactory-project-takes-major-step-forward

Components

Tata's UK gigafactory project takes major step forward

Sir Robert McAlpine to build multi-billion-pound factory

National Grid is turning analogue to digital - Ctrl Alt Lead podcast
/podcasts/4333508/national-grid-analogue-digital-ctrl-alt-lead-podcast

Public Sector

National Grid is turning analogue to digital - Ctrl Alt Lead podcast

'We can't do what we've always done, just more efficiently'

AI to blame for Google's rocketing greenhouse gas emissions
/news/4331149/ai-blame-googles-rocketing-greenhouse-gas-emissions

Green

AI to blame for Google's rocketing greenhouse gas emissions

Casts doubt on search giant's 'Net Zero by 2030' goal