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This is a selection among article about Small Business Women. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
Coping with a Serious Data Loss from your Computer Hard
Drive
Darryl Peddle
Data loss is an expensive reality. It's a hard fact that it happens more often
then users like to admit. A recent study by the accounting firm McGladrey and
Pullen estimates that one out of every 500 data centers will experience a severe
computer disaster this year. As a result, almost half of those companies will go
out of business. At the very least, a data loss disaster can mean lost income
and missed business opportunities.
The other side of data loss is the psychological and emotional turmoil it can
cause to IT managers and business owners. Despair, panic, and the knowledge that
the whole organization might be at risk are involved. In a sense, that's only
fair, since human error is one of the two largest contributing factors in data
loss. Together with mechanical failure, it accounts for almost 75 per cent of
all incidents. (Software corruption, computer viruses and physical disasters
such as fire and water damage make up the rest.)
Disk drives today are typically reliable. Human beings, it turns out, are not. A
Strategic Research Corp. study done in 2000 found that approximately 15 per cent
of all unplanned downtime occurred due to human error. A significant proportion
of that happened because users failed to implement adequate backup procedures,
either having trouble with their backups, or having no backup at all.
How does it happen that skilled, high-level users put their systems - and their
businesses - at such risk?
In many cases, the problem starts long before the precipitating system error is
made, that is, when users place their faith in out-of-box solutions that may not,
in fact, fit their organization's needs. Instead of assessing their business and
technology requirements, then going to an appropriate engineered solution, even
experienced IT professionals at large corporations will often simply buy what
they're sold. In this case, faith in technology can be an vice instead of a
virtue.
But human intervention itself can sometimes be the straw that breaks the
technology's back. When the office of a Venezuelan civil engineering firm was
devastated by floods, its owners sent 17 soaked, mud-coated disks from three
RAID arrays to us in plastic bags. A tough enough salvage job was made even more
complex by the fact that someone had frozen the drives before shipping them. As
the disks thawed, yet more damage was done. (After eight weeks of painstaking
directory-by-directory recovery, all the data from the remaining fifteen disks
was retrieved.)
Sometimes, the underlying cause of a data loss event is simply shoddy
housekeeping. The more arduous the required backup routine, the less likely it
will be done on a regular basis. A state ambulance monitoring system suffered a
serious disk failure, only to discover that its automated backup hadn't run for
fourteen months. A tape had jammed in the drive, but no-one had noticed.
When disaster strikes, the normal human reaction is panic. Because the loss of
data signifies critical consequences, even the most competent IT staff can jump
to conclusions, and take inappropriate action. A blank screen at a critical time
can lead to a series of naive decisions, each one compounding the preceding
error. Wrong buttons get pushed, and the disaster only gets worse. Sometimes the
pressure to correct the system failure speedily can result in an attempt to
reconfigure an entire RAID array. IT specialists are typically not equipped to
deal with crisis modes or data recovery techniques. Just as a good physician is
trained to prolong life, the skilled IT specialist is trained to keep the system
running. When a patient dies, the physician turns to others, such as nurses or
counselors to manage the situation. When significant data loss occurs, the IT
specialist turns to the data recovery professional.
Data recovery specialists are innovative problem solvers. Often, the application
of basic common sense, when no-one else is in any condition to apply it, is the
beginning of the journey towards data recovery. The data recovery specialist
draws on a wealth of experience, married to a "never say die" attitude, and a
comprehensive tool kit of problem-solving procedures. Successful recovery
outcomes hinge on a combination of innovative logistics, applied problem-solving,
and "technology triage," the process of stabilizing an affected system quickly,
analyzing and treating its wounds, and preparing it for surgery. The triage
process sets priorities, such as targeting which files are needed first or which
are absolutely vital to the functioning of the business, and establishes whether
files might be recovered in less structured formats (such as text-only), which
may be desirable when time is crucial.
The art and science of professional data recovery can spell the difference
between a business' success or its failure. Before that level of intervention is
required, though, users can take steps to ensure that the probability of a data
loss disaster is minimized.
Basic to any business technology plan is a regular fire-drill procedure. Back-up
routines may be in place, staff may assigned to specific roles, hardware and
software may be configured - but, if the user isn't completely sure that
everything works the way it should, a data loss event is inevitable. Having
adequate, tested, and current backups in place is critical. A hardware breakdown
should not be compounded by human error - if the malfunctioning drive is
critical, the task of dealing with it should go to a data recovery professional.
Just as data loss disasters are rooted in a combination of mechanical failure
and human error, so, too, the data recovery solution lies in a creative marriage
of the technological and the human. The underlying philosophy of successful data
recovery is that technology is something to be used by human beings, not
something that uses us.
Name: Darryl Peddle
Company: CBL Technologies, Canada
Author description: Darryl Peddle is an Internet Marketing Specialist with CBL
Technologies, one of the largest data recovery specialists in the world.
Website: http://www.cbltech.com
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