Hurricane Sandy's Effects on IT Operations to Ripple Across Nation
NEWS ANALYSIS: Hurricane Sandy is sure to bring widespread damage to the Northeastern U.S. The monster storm's effects on IT operations will ripple across the U.S. and potentially around the world.
Once you’re taken care of your data, determine the likelihood that your data center will be adversely affected. If you’re on a high floor of a substantial building, and you don’t have exterior windows, the chances are pretty good that your data center won’t be destroyed. If your data center is in the basement, figure out whether it’s possible to turn off and move your critical servers, storage and infrastructure to a higher level. If it’s not, start making plans to buy new data center equipment and to restore your data from your offsite backup. For many companies directly in the storm’s path, the issue isn’t whether their data center will be affected, it’s how badly. You might just lose power or communications. But it might be worse. But suppose you’re not located in the Mid-Atlantic or the Northeast? You’re probably safe from having your data center taken out (unless some other freak weather event comes along), but you may need to take action anyway. Does your business depend on data centers or cloud services with locations near the U.S. east coast? Even if your cloud services provider has other locations, you need to make sure that your data isn’t located in the area at risk. If it is, now’s the time to get your cloud provider to move your data to another data center.






















