Linear Tape-Open (LTO)-based storage has long been the economic favorite for data backup and archiving. Much of the world’s backup data resides in portable, remotely stored tape drives, at the ready in case disaster should strike.
So it’s highly likely that you have existing investments to protect your data in LTO infrastructure, software, and processes. If it isn’t broken, why “fix” it?
As digital transformation initiatives rollout, data volumes soar, and retrieval needs grow more dynamic, you might find yourself looking to add another layer of data protection to your backup and archiving infrastructure.
Or you might be thinking that, since cloud seems to be the wave of the future, it wouldn’t hurt to test the waters to see how well the cloud could one day handle your storage requirements.
In fact, because the latest iteration of LTO technology is limited in its compatibility with previous LTO generations, now might be the perfect time to start building a migratory bridge from your LTO environment to the latest iteration of cloud storage, Cloud Storage 2.0.
This technology generation has introduced unprecedented economics and simplicity to using the cloud as a storage medium, with the added benefit that all cloud-stored data is immediately retrievable.
Testing Cloud Storage 2.0 for a subset of your data storage needs will help you start paving the way to a more affordable future in which data is readily accessible, and one in which it’s far easier to meet the recovery point and recovery time objectives (RPOs and RTOs) of your disaster recovery plans.
Given existing investments in tape for disaster recovery and archiving applications, does it make sense to extend LTO to the cloud? Cost-benefit analyses of cloud storage have long come out in favor of LTO, but the economic pendulum has started to swing with the advent of Cloud Storage 2.0 economics.
That means it might be worth testing the cloud as a remote backup destination for extra data protection or simply for experimentation purposes.
Not all clouds are created equal
Many cloud storage providers have complex, tiered offerings that make simply deciding what tier to use for any given need a project unto itself. These are Cloud Storage 1.0 providers.
Because the differences between tiers can be subtle, and your requirements may change over time, it can be difficult to know whether your data is in the “right” tier at any point in time, and how that may impact your budget.
Using less expensive, slow tiers forces you to give up your ability to gain instant access to your data. And when you do want to download your data, which you’re already paying to store, most cloud storage providers charge an egress fee just for the privilege.
Cloud Storage doesn’t do any of these things.
All storage is instantly available. We offer a simple pricing plan, for which we charge a flat per terabyte per month, with no egress fees. So you can get your data whenever you want it and you can get it fast—with no financial penalties to worry about.
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