Have you decided not to renew your Maintenance Subscription? We’re sorry to hear that. We hope you will reconsider in the future. If you do, we would like to offer you a 10% discount on your next order as a “thank you” for taking a short survey that will help us improve our software and service. Read more…
(Memphis, TN USA 2/22/2010) Remote Backup Systems (RBS), the founders of the online backup industry and developers of the RBackup and Mercury OEM Online Backup platforms have released a free online tool developed for Service Providers to use to estimate the storage space needed by their clients, and the time required to do a backup.
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Remote Backup Systems offers several similar products and services. This document will help you choose the one that is right for you. Read more…
Remote Backup Systems (RBS) (www.remote-backup.com), the leader and founder of the online backup industry and developer of the RBackup and Mercury OEM Online Backup platforms, today announced it has lowered prices on Service Provider software editions of its award-winning software, as well as the costs associated with its Virtual Hosting service. Read more…
The RBS News for December 2009 contains the following articles:
- How to Set Prices & Storage Plans, Predict Profits for your Online Backup Service
- Letter from the President
- News and Announcements
- Sales and Marketing Performance Tips
- Gautam’s Corner – our Lead Developer Answers Your Questions
- Service Providers with Premium Maintenance now have a FREE Remote Help tool…
- Are you considering another Online Backup Software Provider?
- RBS offers End User Tech Support
- The Mercury Affiliate Program
The newsletter is posted at this link:
http://remote-backup.com/rbsnews/2009/rbsnews0912.pdf
(Memphis, TN) Remote Backup Systems, the founders of the online backup industry and developers of the RBackup and Mercury OEM Online Backup platforms has announced that its new Mercury Online Backup platform will be available to sell as a pay-as-you-go hosted solution. With Mercury you can deploy a powerful, fully branded Online Backup service similar in features, functionality and price to Mozy® and Carbonite®.
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July 27, 2009
Millions of High Speed Internet and FiOS Users Now Provided Access to Thousands of on-the-go, Wi-Fi Hot Spots Across the U.S.
NEW YORK, July 27 /PRNewswire/ – Verizon continues to enhance its broadband service capabilities for consumers to offer competitive advantages over rival communication providers.
Since the beginning of the …
Whether or not to outsource your disaster recovery (DR) or create a DR site in-house can be a tough decision. Learn about the pros and cons of outsourcing disaster recovery.



Verizon today boosted its upload speeds across its FiOS fiber-to-the-home broadband packages, which leads me to wonder if upload speeds are the new download speeds in a saturated market for broadband. Om and I both have complained about anemic upload speeds, which are becoming more of a handicap in today’s world of video uploads and online backup. Given Verizon’s history as an innovator in broadband (spending $23 million on fiber is a bold move), and a renewed package of incentives out today to drive subscription rates (you get a netbook or a Flip camcorder with a triple-play subscription), upstream speeds may get more competitive. From a Verizon blog post today touting the changes:
We think broadband isn’t really fast unless it’s two-way fast, and we’re amping up speeds in both directions for our most popular FiOS Internet services. We’re also offering incentives for consumers to switch to FiOS.
We’re raising the speed of our entry-level FiOS Internet service from 10/2 Mbps to 15/5 Mbps, and we’re raising the speed of our flagship, mid-tier offering from 20/5 Mbps to 25/15 Mbps. In downstate New York, FiOS Internet is even faster with a new entry-level speed of 25/15 Mbps and a new mid-tier offering of 35/20 Mbps available in bundles.
Cable providers, because of limited spectrum allocated for upstream, may have difficulty matching such boosts, making upstream speed a prime candidate for differentiation between cable and telecommunications providers — or perhaps merely between those communication providers that offer fiber-to-the-home. Companies, such as AT&T, which provide fiber to the node can offer symmetrical upstream speeds but both upstream and downstream speeds are limited by how far away a customer’s home may be from the node. For example, AT&T currently offers downstream speeds of 18 Mbps in some areas, but upstream peaks at 1.5 Mbps.
Right now, the vast majority of consumers don’t bump up against upstream limits often, but if service providers really want to get people excited about faster download packages ,they’re going to need to deliver services such as home security applications and video conferencing that require both fast downstream and upstream speeds. Only then will average consumers see the need to upgrade to $100, 50 Mbps broadband packages. But at that point, they’re also going to notice if their provider is sucking up their content with the equivalent of a cocktail straw while delivering downloads with a fire hose. Then Verizon’s upgrades will look prescient, kind of like its investment in fiber-to-the-home does today.

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This item provided by GigaOM