Teradata announced that Teradata's Disaster Recovery as a Service (DRaaS) offering is now available on
Vantage on Amazon Web Services (AWS) and
Vantage on Microsoft Azure.
Teradata DRaaS is a standardized disaster recovery service in which an
on-premises customer receives a Teradata-managed environment in the
public cloud, ready to be spun up at a moment's notice in case of
downtime of customers' onsite analytic systems. Through automation,
frequent backups and industry best practices, customers are guaranteed a
recovery time so that they can count on businesses continuity for their
analytic environment whenever needed.
In
a data-driven world, analytics are mission-critical - and yet a
substantial portion of enterprises do not have business continuity plans
which include a dependable, secondary analytics environment for
situations in which the primary system becomes unavailable, such as
during a security breach or regional power outage. To mitigate such
situations, Teradata offers Disaster Recovery as a Service, providing
on-premises customers a public cloud environment ready to be spun up
on-demand so that business operations can carry on with minimal
disruption. Cloud-based disaster recovery solutions are extremely cost
effective by virtue of minimal resource usage, which consists mostly of
low-cost object storage for daily or weekly backups and hibernated
compute for the secondary Vantage system in the cloud.
"Disaster
Recovery (DR) is increasingly recognized by our customers as necessary,
given that an unexpected loss of a production analytics system could
mean more than just lost revenue. Unplanned downtime can lead to loss of
data and business reputation, decreased client satisfaction and
retention, reduced employee morale, productivity issues and legal
entanglements," said Brian Wood, Director and Cloud Advocate at
Teradata. "In the past, DR required an additional - largely
underutilized - physical system, which was often expensive or resulted
in poor ROI. With Disaster Recovery as a Service, Teradata is filling
the gap by providing a solution in the cloud that is much more cost
effective due to the separation of compute and storage: the compute
resources are off whenever they are not used - which is essentially
always - and only spun up when needed."
Teradata
is making it easy for its large installed base of on-premises customers
to leverage the cloud while extending the usefulness and ROI of their
physical systems. Customers get the most value out of previous
investments by continuing to use what they already own - as well as take
steps into the cloud with hybrid cloud offers such as this one, which
span both on-premises and cloud.
In
addition, Teradata's DRaaS uses the same advocated backup and restore
(BAR) infrastructure that customers use on-premises. This means there is
no additional infrastructure to buy or learn, which makes the solution
plug-n-play. On-premises customers simply change the destination
location of daily/weekly disaster recovery backups to Teradata-managed
cloud object storage, either Amazon S3 or Azure Blob.
Availability
Teradata
Disaster Recovery as a Service is now available using AWS or Azure
infrastructure in most AWS and Azure regions globally. Similar
capability using Google Cloud Platform infrastructure is planned for
introduction in 2021. Customers seeking an even more comprehensive,
turnkey DRaaS offer should consider Teradata's Managed Disaster Recovery options.