Bandwidth : About the teleco shakeout and the next generation of IP networks.
Updated: 6/5/2002; 2:01:04 AM.

 



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Wednesday, May 08, 2002


Up until now

this hadn't been a story that smelled all that bad. Clearly, the loan to Ebbers was questionable. Clearly, Worldcom has suffered through the downturn in telecom demand. Now, evidence of the cross-breeding that leads to some fairly odd-looking creatures may be showing! Warren Buffett has said, "you never know who's swimming naked until the tide goes out."

Ebbers Invested With WorldCom Board Member Who Approved Loan. Bernard J. Ebbers, the ousted WorldCom chief executive, reportedly made a big personal investment in a company associated with the board member who approved his controversial $366 million loan. By Stephanie Kirchgaessner and Richard Waters, Ft.com. [New York Times: Business]


10:23:45 AM     Comments[]


Protecting Your Business

Here's the scenario: your company has found a way to run its primary business management/accounting software via the web. You've found a host , you've moved the software and data, you've got the bandwidth and everyone is happy. No more internal servers, no more network to manage, just a bunch of PC's connected to a fat pipe.

Your professionally managed host has sophisticated network management skills and you are confident in your decision to move everything off site. Then, one day you learn that someone has bought your host. The email indicates that you'll experience no disruption of service, etc.

Here's the question: what if something happens to your host? What arrangements should you make for a daily, weekly, monthly copy of your data? Should you and the host agree that a tape is going to the lockbox every Friday night? What if the host is in another city? Do you want a tape delivered via FedEx each Monday morning? Can you catch up from a week-old tape?

Who do you trust and how much do you trust? The outsourced ASP model is an attractive concept. Do you trust it with the total financial and information base of your company?

IBM touts new backup services. Big Blue is set to announce the new service, which will allow companies to get their computer systems back up and running quickly in the case of a disaster. [CNET News.com]


8:42:23 AM     Comments[]


Demand - not debt - is the key!

WorldCom Seeks Big Loan. WorldCom is expected to borrow $2.65 billion from its banks as part of negotiations to rework the terms of its financings. By Riva D. Atlas and Barnaby J. Feder. [New York Times: Technology]


7:18:24 AM     Comments[]


© Copyright 2002 Steve Pilgrim.



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