I like Acronis but I've seen half a dozen disk imaging software packages that 
backup everything from Windows 2000 up to Windows 2008 for $50 - $100. They 
don't make any distinction that it's a workstation or server operating system. 
They just restore sectors to a drive. An as far as I can see, the only thing 
separating these packages from Acronis is the bootable media.

If I can find a software for our 10 servers that cost a total of $500 - $1000 
instead of $10,000 that seems worth pursuing.

----------------------

Bob Hartung
Wisco Industries, Inc.
736 Janesville St.
Oregon, WI 53575
Tel: (608) 835-3106 x215
Fax: (608) 835-7399
e-mail: bhartung(at)wiscoind.com
  _____  

From: Gavin Wilby [mailto:[email protected]]
To: NT System Admin Issues [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Mon, 12 Jul 2010 09:13:07 -0500
Subject: Re: Server Disk Imaging

For what its worth, Acronis is worth every penny of what it costs.


That 1000 bucks, when you actually really need it, say for a complelty popped 
server, is nothing…


You might guess I am a fan, but to be honest, I wouldnt even consider another 
image based backup product over Acronis now we have used it on a few sites.  


Its not just the DR to consider, as its so quick to image and bare metal 
restore a server, for testing purposes etc its excellent. Why do an install on 
a live server when you can simply do it on a copy?  


Gavin.


On Mon, Jul 12, 2010 at 2:40 PM,  <[email protected]> wrote:
    
Well, it seems nearly all "Image  a server and be able to restore it" products 
all run about $1000 a  pop.  
  
Check out UltraBac Gold.  They  are staking their reputation on their ability 
to do "live" images,  and then to restore to any machine (bare metal).  They 
also have (you  guessed - additional license) a product which will create the 
image directly  to a virtual machine.  SO, if the server blows, one simply 
brings  the VM on line.  
  
We have one Gold license and do not  have the VM product.  We have a VM 
"ready", but the restore  for us would be a two-step process.  
  
Anyway, their "preview" product  is the full product (ALL licenses good) but is 
time-limited (ie, 2-4 weeks).  
  
They're definely worth a look!  
  
http://www.ultrabac.com
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ASPCA®  
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"Bob Hartung" <[email protected]>  wrote on 07/12/2010 08:30:56 AM:



  
  > I've been looking for a disk imaging solution for the servers on our
  > network. They currently are all Dell PowerEdge servers running 
  > Windows 2003. My main goal is to be able to restore a server quickly
  > in the event of a hardware failure, like a RAID card failure that  
  > hoses the hard drives.
  > 
  > We use Arcserve for doing nightly backups and as a file by file 
  > solution, it's fine. For disaster recovery, it leaves a lot to be  
  > desired. It essentially does a reinstall of the operating system and
  > then restores from back. As such, it's not very fast.
  > 
  > I've tried a number of disk imaging software packages. They all can  
  > create an image of the server system drive while the server is 
  > running and that's great. However, what seems to always be a weak  
  > point is restoring from a boot disk.
  > 
  > All the packages have a utility to create a bootable CD but they 
  > generally have a problem either accessing the RAID volume or the LAN
  > adapter or both. Whether they use Windows PXE, Linux or DOS, drivers
  > seem to be a problem. It would seem logical that these software 
  > packages would have a utility to copy the existing drivers off the  
  > system and incorporate them into the BootDisk but none do that I've  found.
  > 
  > The only package I've tried so far that seems to work with the 
  > couple of servers I've been testing on is Acronis Backup and 
  > Recovery for Servers. I'd use this if it weren't so expensive at 
  > roughly $1,000 per server.
  > 
  > Anyone using a disk imaging solution they'd care to recommend?
  > 
  > Thanks.  



> 
  > ----------------------
  > 
  > Bob Hartung
  > Wisco Industries, Inc.
  > 736 Janesville St.
  > Oregon, WI 53575
  > Tel: (608) 835-3106 x215
  > Fax: (608) 835-7399
  > e-mail: bhartung(at)wiscoind.com   
>    
>    

           

          

           






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Gavin Wilby,
Twitter: http://twitter.com/gavin_wilby
GSXR Blog: http://www.stoof.co.uk
        

           

          

           

  
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