In yet another move of a standard, server-based application to an offsite alternative, Symantec revealed on 3 May that its venerable and market-leading BackUp Exec will be adding a cloud-based option later this year.
The company made the announcement – one of several, in fact – at its annual Symantec Vision conference in Las Vegas.
Symantec’s Backup Exec.cloud, aimed at small businesses or remote offices that want to wash their hands of IT infrastructure, will be a hosted, automated backup service that protects files on Windows desktops and servers with a straightforward user interface for online backup and recovery.
Thus, it will soon compete directly with such marketshare-grabbing services as EMC Mozy, Seagate’s i365, CommVault, Acronis, Amazon S3 and others for the SMB cloud storage business.
However, Symantec has a built-in advantage, due to its considerable (nearly 60 percent) share of the installed backup market, so it will be able to get in the door to existing customers first with the new service for potential sales opportunities.
“This is the end of backup as we know it. Users will be able to basically set it and forget it,” Muscarella said. “They will be able to protect their data by streaming it over a SSL connection to Symantec’s secure, off-site data centres. Backups can be started by file changes or run according to a set schedule, while modified files are protected as they come in the gateway.”
Should disaster strike, the service keeps business data up and running by restoring critical files to any service-enabled machine using only a web-based connection. Employees may use individual file restore feature for routine file retrieval, Muscarella said.
Muscarella said improvements within Backup Exec 2010 R3, the on-site version, include:
Symantec also announced that some new Backup Exec software-based appliances, also to be launched later this year. These will house Backup Exec R3 in easy-to-use templates, which standardises the protection of information from a data centre, by a channel partner, or from other remote locations.
Denial from TSMC, after multiple reports it was in talks with Intel over a joint…
CEO Tim Cook talks to Trump official, as IDC notes China's smartphone market growth, and…
Another big name chip maker expects a hefty financial charge, after the US tightened rules…
More bad news for Google. Second time in less than a year that some part…
Federal office that tackled misinformation and disinformation from hostile nations is closed down, after criticism…
After Nvidia admits it will take $5.5 billion charge as Trump export limits of slower…