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Archive for December, 2007

The “shocking” cost of downtime due to power outages

According to a 2005 whitepaper by APC (PDF Link), manufacturers of uninterruptable power supplies (UPS’s) and power conversion equipment:

“A recent study in the USA has shown that industrial and digital business firms are losing $45.7 billion per year due to power interruptions1. Across all business sectors, an estimated $104 billion to $164 billion is lost due to interruptions with another $15 billion to $24 billion due to all other power quality problems. … Loss of processing in a large financial corporation can cost thousands of unrecoverable dollars per minute of downtime, as well as many hours of recovery time to follow. Program and data corruption caused by a power interruption can create problems for software recovery operations that may take weeks to resolve.”

When looking at national figures, it’s easy to say “that’ll never happen to me.” Let me bring this a little closer to home:

  • If your 24-hour courier business relies on a dedicated server with software to dispatch your drivers, what happens when you have a power outage that last several hours?
  • If your e-commerce site is down for even an hour, how much does that translate to in lost revenue?
  • How do you calculate the value of the lost opportunities when a storm knocks out power to your server room and your sales force can’t access your pricey CRM application? (Remember the storms this summer?)

The average office battery backup lasts a half hour or less. Power outages due to storm damage can take hours to days before power is restored. Fortunately, the recent ice storms didn’t hit the Chicago area as badly as they did Oklahoma City, where:

“About 468,000 homes and business still had no power Wednesday in Oklahoma, suffering its worst power outage on record. That was down from a peak of some 618,000 customers Tuesday, but utility officials said it could be a week to 10 days before power is fully restored.”

To avoid having your business go down in a similar incident — summer or winter — host your servers in a fully-redundant data center like XNet’s Critical Computing Facility™ with backup generator power and full network redundancy. To arrange a tour or for questions on services and pricing, contact us via the web or phone at 630.983.6064.

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Posted on December 12th, 2007 by Tim Courtney
Posted in Critical Computing, Disaster Recovery | No Comments »
 

XNet honored with Business Ledger Entrepreneurial Excellence Award

Arthur Zards   Brian Clark
Arthur Zards
 
Brian Clark

XNet is proud to announce that co-founders Arthur Zards and Brian Clark are recipients of this year’s Innovation Award from the Business Ledger’s Entrepreneurial Excellence Awards. Zards and Clark were honored alongside other award recipients at the Ledger’s awards reception held October 19 at the Chicago Automobile Trade Association, and were included in a special insert in the October 29 issue of the Business Ledger.

For further details, see the following Business Ledger articles:

About XNet

XNet is a privately held, industry-leading Internet solutions provider located in the heart of the Silicon Prairie in Lisle, Illinois. Since 1992, XNet has been instrumental in growing Internet technologies in the Chicago area, and is now the largest independently owned Internet service provider in Chicagoland.

By maintaining close client relationships and a distinct understanding of tomorrow’s technology, XNet has been the leader in Internet solutions for Chicago’s top corporations. XNet’s client list is essentially a “who’s who” of the technology elite, including Blaupunkt, BP Amoco, Lucent, Argonne Labs, Bosch, Abbott Labs, Motorola, and the Morton Arboretum, just to name a few. XNet was founded in 1992 by Naperville Central High School graduates Arthur Zards and Brian Clark.

Media Contact: Ben Bradley, PR Counsel for XNET, 630-221-9844 or benbradley@bwmginc.com.

Contact: Arthur Zards, President, XNet, 630-983-6064.

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Posted on December 4th, 2007 by Tim Courtney
Posted in Entrepreneurship, News | No Comments »
 
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